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Xiaodong Xu; Cheng Jia; Kang Chen; Lijuan Chen – npj Science of Learning, 2025
This study used fNIRS (functional near-infrared spectroscopy) to investigate the neural mechanisms underlying the processing of supernatural fiction, featuring either fictional or realistic characters, compared to real-world stories. Participants' brain activations were recorded while they read supernatural/realistic scenarios. Results showed that…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Reading Comprehension, Brain, Realism
David W. Kupferman – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
This paper considers educational futures from the perspective of social justice. It takes as its framework futures studies, which looks at what is probable (what is likely to happen), what is possible (what could happen), and what is preferable (what we would like to see/make happen). It also makes the case for science fiction as a method of…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Futures (of Society), Educational Change, Science Fiction
Gideon Dishon – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
This paper examines visions of AI-personalized learning through an analysis of Neal Stephenson's Science Fiction Novel 'The Diamond Age'. While contemporary discourse is often characterized by deterministic visions of AI-based personalization as a panacea to the homogenization and standardization of mass schooling, the novel presents a more…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Individualized Instruction, Science Fiction, Novels
Asilia Franklin-Phipps; Tristan Gleason – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
Critical pedagogy emphasizes the inseparability of politics and education (Freire, 2012; hooks, 1994). However, many strands of critical pedagogy are focused on ideological critique of elements of Modernity such as racism, sexism, colonialism, extractivism, and domination which are treated as unintended errors or ancillary conditions. That is,…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Fiction, Imagination, Epistemology
Christine Seon Rheem – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
This article constellates N.K Jemisin's "The Broken Earth" trilogy with decolonial epistemologies to push the boundaries of storied curricula and explore how we come to know. I argue that the imaginative world-building of science fiction can serve as worlding stories--not wording stories--that act, move, and connect knowledge,…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Story Telling, Reader Text Relationship, Colonialism
Qui Dorian Alexander – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
"After the end of the world" is a speculative concept used to imagine what life could be after the world "ends" envisioning a new world that does not currently exist. Taking up Gumbs' metaphor, this essay explores what education could be "after the end of school," imaging a world beyond education as we know it to be.…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Imagination, Fiction, Praxis
David K. Seitz – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2023
This paper reflects on the classroom use of the "Star Trek" American science fiction television franchise to teach critical and emotional geographies to undergraduates specializing in science, technology, education, and mathematics (STEM). Both science fiction and STEM education are ambivalent and contradictory scenes of social…
Descriptors: Geography, Geography Instruction, STEM Education, Undergraduate Students
Frederic Krome – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2024
Science fiction literature and film are an underappreciated source for the teaching of history. Finding material that can excite a student's curiosity can be a key towards greater student engagement, especially among students who are taking history as a requirement, rather than from interest. The discovery that they can read or watch science…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Instructional Innovation, Teaching Methods, Science Fiction
Noel Gough – Gender and Education, 2024
This essay offers a rationale for deploying ecofeminist science fiction stories as object-oriented thought experiments in science and environmental education, with particular reference to developments in genetics and evolutionary biology, and their implications for human (and more-than-human) reproduction and kinship in the period following the…
Descriptors: Imagination, Environmental Education, Feminism, Science Fiction
Jody N. Polleck – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2024
This study examines the experiences of 10 neurodiverse students in Amsterdam, Netherlands, who all participated within in-class youth-led book clubs that centered science fiction. Over a 6-month period, the researcher conducted pre- and post-interviews and analyzed these along with transcription data from 24 book club sessions. Findings reveal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Culturally Relevant Education, Cultural Relevance, Science Fiction
Christian Giang; Loredana Addimando; Luca Botturi; Lucio Negrini; Alessandro Giusti; Alberto Piatti – Journal for STEM Education Research, 2023
Technologies have become an essential part of the daily life of our children. Consequently, artifacts that imply the early adoption of abstract thinking affect the imagination of children and young people in relation to the world of technology, now much more than they did in the past. With the emerging importance of robots in many aspects of our…
Descriptors: Robotics, Freehand Drawing, Childrens Art, Science Fiction
Ryan B. Collis – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
As an autistic researcher and doctoral candidate, I have designed my dissertation research in a way that values the lived experience of my four autistic participants. Using their responses to a series of material objects and a science fiction novel by, and about, an autistic person, I hope to find new and innovative ways to reconceptualize…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Doctoral Students, Doctoral Dissertations, Science Fiction
Yuan Yang; Miao Xu; Bo Gong; Le Yang; Yuan Zang – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Despite the growing demand for technological literacy and critical thinking in higher education, traditional pedagogical methods often fail to fully engage students in developing these essential skills. Science fiction presents an underutilized yet promising tool for addressing this gap. This study investigates the impact of Science fiction on…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Technological Literacy, Critical Thinking, Higher Education
Morvay, Jenna Kamrass – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
In this article, N.K. Jemisin's multiple-Hugo-award-winning trilogy "The Broken Earth" (2015-2017) is read with Sylvia Wynter's genealogy of who counts as human, and Donna Haraway's conception of the "Chthulucene," a spatiotemporal location in which all beings are interconnected with each other. The article argues that…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Social Distance, Education, World Views
S. R. Toliver – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to further theorize BlackCrit to include a deeper focus on the framing idea of Black liberatory fantasy via Afrofuturism. Design/methodology/approach: To develop the theoretical connections, the author revisits their previous scholarship on Black girls' Afrofuturist storytelling practices to elucidate how the…
Descriptors: African American Literature, African American Culture, Futures (of Society), Story Telling

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