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Lena Wimmer; Gregory Currie; Stacie Friend; Heather J Ferguson – Creativity Research Journal, 2024
Although philosophers have long claimed that reading fiction has the potential to improve imaginative capacities, empirical evidence on this topic is limited. We report an experiment that aims to conceptually replicate and extend previous work by Djikic and colleagues by testing whether reading literary fiction reduces the need for closure, and by…
Descriptors: Illiteracy, Fiction, Reading, Imagination
Catriona Cunningham; Jennie Mills – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
Increasing numbers of researchers in the field of higher education research are searching for meaning rather than metrics: something in their data that call to them and that make their hearts soar. This paper leans into post-qualitative approaches and attempts to resist methodological arrest, drawing on the disciplinary language of literary…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research, Fiction, Literary Criticism
S. Marek Muller – Communication Teacher, 2024
This original teaching idea is designed for a course unit on protest communication. It consists of a performed protest speech, dubbed the "fantastical speech," and a post-speech reflective analysis. Students utilize the subversive genre of fanfiction to compose a protest speech in which, as a fictional character, they convince their…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Public Speaking, Fiction, Role Playing
Punya Mishra; Nicole Oster; Phoebe Wagner – International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education, 2024
This paper combines social fiction and academic analysis to envision hopeful futures for higher education. At the heart of the exploration is Phoebe Wagner's speculative fiction piece, "University, Speaking," which personifies a university grappling with environmental, political, and social change. Phoebe Wagner's first-person narrative…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Higher Education, Fiction, Community Attitudes
Alison Singer; Caitlin Kirby; Eleanor Rappolee – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2023
Facts about climate change are often ineffective in impacting people's climate change beliefs or environmentally related behaviors. Multiple theories of environmental behavior use norms to foster behavior change. Science fiction writers may also attempt to sway individuals' perceptions of climate change through imaginings of a future affected by…
Descriptors: Climate, Fiction, Nonfiction, Environmental Education
Debra R. Comer; Robert L. Holbrook Jr. – Management Teaching Review, 2024
We present a fictional short story about embezzlement, "Great Experiment" by Jeffrey Eugenides, as a resource for management classes. We begin by providing a brief description of the story, in which a decent and law-abiding 40-something man's lack of professional success and envy of his wealthy neighbors contribute to his decision to…
Descriptors: Ethics, Fiction, Business Administration Education, Literary Genres
Henderson, Emily F.; Reynolds, Pauline J. – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2023
Representations of higher education in fiction-based sources contribute to forming public perceptions of academia, and so are a form of public pedagogy. Within popular culture representations, understandings of academics are constructed using particular tropes which build shared meanings of the profession. Conferences are one of these tropes and…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education as a Field of Study, Fiction, Conferences (Gatherings), Popular Culture
Steven A. Stolz; Maurizio Toscano – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
This essay uses a fictional narrative to explore the phenomenon of Pretendians in the contemporary university. Summer, who is one of the protagonists in the fictional dialogue, self-identifies as Indigenous, and is hired as an academic based on this identity, and according to affirmative action policies. Whilst working as an Indigenous academic…
Descriptors: Universities, Self Concept, Self Esteem, Professional Identity
Stolz, Steven A. – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
The use of narrative has been a time-honoured way of exploring complex ideas, and a valuable way to learn. An obvious example that epitomises this thesis, are the dialogues of Plato. Indeed, what gives significance to these dialogues is the way in which complex ideas are revealed through the struggles and conflicts of one or more characters. With…
Descriptors: Justice, Dialogs (Language), Story Telling, Fiction
Salinas, Juan L. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
This article is a reflective analysis of an assignment in which undergraduate students developed dystopian, postapocalyptic, fantasy, and fictional short story parables to illustrate their understanding of sociological theory. In a social theory course, students were assigned a final paper in which they designed a short story that integrated…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Sociology, Social Theories, Teaching Methods
Antonio J. Castro; Jason Williamson – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2024
This multiple case study traced how secondary preservice social studies teachers grappled with understanding race/racism in their reading of the novel, All American Boys. Participants, all self-identified as white, consisted of two cohorts of students who attended a large midwestern university and were enrolled in an advanced social studies…
Descriptors: Fiction, Preservice Teachers, Social Studies, Racial Factors
Cox, Andrew; Cameron, David; Checco, Alessandro; Herrick, Tim; Mawson, Maria; Steadman-Jones, Richard – Higher Education Research and Development, 2023
AI and robots have the potential to transform Higher Education (HE) but pose many ethical and implementation challenges. To ensure the widest debate about our choices for the future of HE with these technologies, engaging ways to present the issues are needed and this article is part of an exploration of the potential of fictional narratives to do…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Higher Education, Educational Research
Lockard, Joe; Goggin, Peter – Science & Education, 2023
The paper describes an upper-division university course in Mars literature taught online since Fall 2013. The course readings comprise six novels relating to Mars. Authors include H.G. Wells, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Ray Bradbury, Phillip K. Dick, Greg Bear, and Kim Stanley Robinson. After an introduction, sections of the paper discuss course…
Descriptors: College Science, Astronomy, Space Sciences, Science Instruction
Jemima Hill – English in Education, 2024
Girls are consistently found to have higher literacy levels than their male peers and to consume more social narrative fiction. This study conducted interviews with four autistic girls to better understand how reading fiction can inform the camouflaging behaviours of autistic girls. Participants described how imitating characters embodying desired…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Females, College Students, Student Attitudes
Wiji Sekar Yuniasih; Putri Susi Waluyo; Taufik Arochman – Journal of English Teaching, 2025
Vocabulary is an important component that students must master in order to master other language skills, such as reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Vocabulary learning can be effectively done through reading stories. A popular example is Alternative Universe (AU), a setting for a work of fan fiction found on Twitter or X. Utilizing a…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Fiction, Social Media, Literary Genres