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Sojot, Amy N. – Policy Futures in Education, 2023
Instead of seeking the slick aesthetics of consumer-friendly creative stories, this paper ventures to the sublime of the incomprehensible and invites us to look into the abyss of education's possibilities. Drawing inspiration from Jeff Vandermeer's 2017 novel, "Borne," and filmmaker David Cronenberg's aesthetic, this paper aims to tell a…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, Creativity
Harper, Jordan; Jenkins, Henry – Policy Futures in Education, 2022
Higher education is at a pivotal point of reflection due to the forces of neoliberalism, anti-Blackness, and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. In the past, higher education has overlooked the university's far future, opting to focus on readily conspicuous change. Along with this disregarded conversation, these crises present higher education faculty,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Futures (of Society), Educational Trends, Neoliberalism
McMain, Emma Minke; Edwards-Schuth, Brandon – Policy Futures in Education, 2023
The iPhone 62 has just been released. Political gridlock and the governmentally approved process of locking immigrant children in cages continue ad infinitum. Public schools resort to primarily remote learning as pandemic viruses ebb and flow. University students study post-postmodernism on campuses that remain on stolen Indigenous land. In this…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, Ecology, Justice
Lorenzo Sánchez-Gatt – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2023
I argue that an analysis of antiblack racism in music education discourse is crucial in identifying and addressing potential for harm in the music classroom. I contend that Black children are particularly, and regularly, subjected to poor stereotypical depictions of their identity in digital media. Furthermore, I contend that this digital…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Futures (of Society), Music Education, Racism
Jandric, Petar; Hayes, Sarah – Policy Futures in Education, 2023
This paper explores a possible future of postdigital education in 2050 using the means of social science fiction. The first part of the paper introduces the shift from 20th century primacy of physics to 21st century primacy of biology with an accent to new postdigital--biodigital reconfigurations and challenges in and after the COVID-19 pandemic.…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Technological Advancement, Futures (of Society), Educational Theories
Turaç, Memet; Yildirim, Nail – International Online Journal of Education and Teaching, 2021
The aim of the study was to speculate about the education in the future in terms of students, classrooms, teachers and schools by adhering to science fiction films. The samples of the study comprised 50 science fiction films selected purposefully among motion pictures by two academics from the field of educational sciences, and one expert from the…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Films, College Faculty, Prediction
Wallin, Jason J. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
The significance of educational research is today predicated on its ability to engage with the ecological, economic, and political challenges of the anthropocene, for where we might take seriously education's commitment to the future necessitates a sustained encounter with the implications and questions raised in the wake of "our"…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Ecology, Futures (of Society), Educational Trends
Akhter, Tawhida – Arab World English Journal, 2021
Literature has been an imitator of life for generations on this earth, this literature has voiced the voiceless. Recent contemporary and postmodern literary theories have catered to burgeoning notions of logic that go beyond human survival on the planet. Science fiction is a genre of fiction that encompasses imaginative concepts like futuristic…
Descriptors: Novels, Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, COVID-19
Geelan, David; Prain, Vaughan; Hasse, Cathrine – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2015
Science fiction and the "technofantasies" of the future that it provides may attract some students to study physics. The details and assumptions informing these "imaginaries" may, on the other hand, be unattractive to other students, or imply that there is not a place for them. This forum discussion complements Cathrine Hasse's…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Physics, Science Interests, Futures (of Society)
Hollar, James L. – Multicultural Education, 2019
In this article, the author recounts his mission: a voyage into the "strange" world of American high school, specifically the science fiction elective classroom. His mission is one of curricular intervention to transform how students, particularly those of color, envision their own futuristic missions. The study strives to serve the too…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Literature, Adolescents, African American Students
Kupferman, David W. – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
The purpose of this paper is to present an alternate response to neoliberal education reforms, in the form of accelerationism, that does not rely on a return to a primitivist localism or direct action (such as that of the Occupy movement). Briefly stated, accelerationism does not try to reform neoliberal tendencies by going around them or from…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Acceleration (Education), Educational Change, Social Systems
Andrews, Gillian – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2015
Possibilities for a different form of education have provided rich sources of inspiration for science fiction writers. Isaac Asimov, Orson Scott Card, Neal Stephenson, Octavia Butler, and Vernor Vinge, among others, have all projected their own visions of what education could be. These visions sometimes engage with technologies that are currently…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Educational Technology, Science Fiction, Science and Society
Raulerson, Joshua Thomas – ProQuest LLC, 2010
A spectre is haunting contemporary technoculture: the spectre of Singularity. Ten years into a century thus far characterized chiefly by the catastrophic failure of global economic and political systems, deepening ecological anxieties, and slow-motion social crisis, the only sector of our collective cultural myth of Progress still vibrantly intact…
Descriptors: Technological Advancement, Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, Humanism
Guerra, Stephanie – Children's Literature in Education, 2009
The American cultural and political landscape has seen changes on the level of seismic shifts in the past four decades, thanks in part to the two very diverse fields of big business and biotechnology. Linking the two arenas together in the literary landscape is a growing body of young adult science fiction that envisions a future shaped profoundly…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Biotechnology, Corporations, Science Fiction
Sullivan, Heather I. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
While nature is often claimed to be a space of harmonized balance or an antidote to the chaos of the modern world, we need a more grounded assessment of nature as endlessly changing and much less predictable than we like to assume. In this essay, I explore Karen Traviss' provocative exploration of unbalanced nature and unbounded bodies in her…
Descriptors: Ecology, Physical Environment, Genetics, Influence of Technology