Speculative Fictions and Educational Futures: Difference between revisions

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"Futures studies is the systematic study of '''possible''', '''probable''' and '''preferable''' futures."


The last few weeks we have worked with storytelling tools like ComicLife and video production media. This week we shift to a collaborative storytelling project using MediaWiki (the same basic coding platform as Wikipedia). There a lots of wikis out there, and you school board tech should be able to set you up (or even install one of these free systems on the server). 
[https://vimeo.com/mediamodules/wikitutorial Tutorial]


Our
== Introduction ==
collective goal is to create a kind of
 
storytelling ecology through
This week we shift to a collaborative storytelling project using MediaWiki (the same basic coding platform as Wikipedia). There are a lots of wikis out there, and your school board tech should be able to set you up (or even install) one of these free systems on the server.
interacting with potential ‘futures’ in
 
education (inspired by major issues in
[[File:Worldbuilding.png]]
the present) and building a repository
 
of different stories and perspectives
Our collective goal is to create a kind of storytelling ecology and to create, in groups, '''possible future worlds of education'''. In thinking about the future of education and learning, we also need to consider transformations in '''technology''', '''culture''', and '''(bio)physical environments'''.
we can collectively learn with. These
 
are the major questions at hand: As
These are the major questions at hand:  
things are now, what might the future
 
of education look like? How do our
* As things are now, what might the future of education look like? (If we 'extrapolate' - or say 'what if?')
unique perspectives and positions
* Why is the work of looking forward and imagining possibility important for us, both in and beyond school contexts?
impact the futures we imagine? Why
* Does considering possible futures help us think critically about the present, past and future? Does, and how does, mapping possibility contribute to confidence and teacher agency, with regard to present and future challenges?
is the work of looking forward and imagining possibility important for us, both in and beyond school contexts?
 
You will be imaging the future of education via science fictional storytelling through the lens of one major issue in education. For bonus marks, Integrate at least one other medium (using video, comiclife, tour builder, audio work, or a tool of your choice) into your wiki page in some way to tell your story. Think beyond the surface and create something meaningful/of interest to you. Engage in listening practices by exploring the work of others within the production (exact parameters of authentic listening negotiated in class) and stories/perspectives beyond our class.
== Collaborative World Building ==
Production 6
 
Science Fiction and Elements of World Building
'''Using the hand-outs as blueprints''': you will (in groups of 3) imagine the future of education via speculative storytelling and world building. Your task is to come up with, and agree upon, some central facets of this new world like: year, state of society/politics, role of schooling (or if there are no more formal schooling institutions, how do we learn?), impacts of technology (e.g., extrapolate on social media, virtual reality ['meta'], generative AI, environmental issues, surveillance, social justice, transhumanism, politics, etc.) and related aspects of human life like identity, social roles, class structures, culture/s and language/s, EDI (equity, diversity, equality, decolonization) and so on. You will need to get together and do some brainstorming to piece this world together.
Content (6 marks): Use science fictional world building techniques and processes of extrapolation (covered in class) to imagine the future of education in the form of a wiki page. To begin, you need to identify the larger, overarching problems facing education, schools, and youth today - and then consider a future condition or "state of affairs" in relation to these challenges or current problems - be them social/cultural, ecological, institutional (schools), pedagogical, and or technological. Consider the conditional term: "What if?" And consider both dystopian and utopian modes of storytelling to make a critical point about schools today, through looking (speculating) towards the future.
 
Include a first- or third-person account of this ‘future’ (through the eyes of someone living in this imagined world) What do you imagine it will feel like to learn in the future? How will it look (if current challenges and problems are not dealt with; if new "innovations" are invented or applied)? For example, will we learn alone, or in community? What will be the role of technology in learning, in relation to pedagogy? How will we learn? Include any research you did to inform your perspective, and be sure to give the general outline of the future you are imagining (Where is this imagined future taking place? When (how far into the future)? Whose learning are you focusing on?) (Ensure that this is a critical vision of the future that connects to current problems or opportunities today).
What trends do you see in the present? Then, while you extrapolate, consider the educational/learning practices and theories discussed in this course (or other courses) as resources for imagining/extrapolating and world building. Toronto is your focus (not Mars).
Reflection/Process (2 marks): How was this future of education inspired by your observations in the present? What process did you go through to construct your future narrative? What challenges did you face in imagining the ‘future’ of education? Why is this kind of storytelling important? How does this connect to ideas we have been exploring in the course? Course ideas should be used to guide your thinking in some way. What sources did you go to as research to inform your perspective/future story? (Be sure to include a section in your wiki where you discuss what research you did/what informed your imagined future in education). (2 marks)
 
Listening (2 marks): Who did you turn to/listen to in order to form your perspective on the ‘future’ of education? Did you revise your own work as a result of that listening or become inspired in some way by the work of others? If your listening involved moving outside of our class community, who did you listen to that informed your approach to this production? Consider how listening is discussed in our text for this week - how did you authentically engage with the stories and perspectives of others in order to inform your work in this production? (2 marks)
Once you have 'sketched out' a common world together, you will collaboratively write about what this world looks like, and how education/learning fits in, along with the rest. Course ideas/texts/theories might be used to guide your thinking in some way.
Transmedia: How did you use new media tools to work through your ideas, or represent the future of education you are imagining? Be creative in how you integrate other tools to supplement your wiki/story. (Bonus 2 marks)
 
Wikimedia Tutorials
== Science Fiction and Elements of World Building ==
WikiMedia Video Tutorial (https://vimeo.com/356940515) (Courtesy of Dr. Kurt Thumlert) Tutorial is at the end of the video.
 
Databending Reverse Engineer [cut and paste into your own page first]
Content (95%): Use world building techniques and processes of extrapolation, etc, (covered in class) to imagine the future of education in the form of a wiki page. To begin, you need to identify the larger, overarching problems facing education, schools, and youth '''today''' - and then consider a future condition or "state of affairs" in relation to these challenges or current problems - be them social/cultural, ecological, institutional (schools), pedagogical, and or technological. Consider (educational) questions related to equity, access, inclusion, diversity, and social justice.
 
Step 1: Build the world together (using encyclopedic format).
Step 2: Create narrative pages (individual) (see below).
 
Consider the conditional term: '''"What if?"''' and review the handouts to help.
 
Each project should include both Wikipedia style entries as well as a first-or third-person narrative accounts of this ‘future’ (through the eyes of someone living in this imagined world). What do you imagine it will feel like to learn in the future? How will it look (if current challenges and problems are not dealt with; if new "innovations" are invented or applied)? For example, will we learn alone, or in community? What will be the role of technology in learning, in relation to pedagogy? How will we learn?  
 
'''Technical Expectations'''
 
Create (as a group) a '''collaborative''' future world 'home page' using the Wikimedia '''encyclopedia format/genre''' of description. Think 2000-3000 words range as a group.
 
Create Your '''Individual''' Pages that link from your home page: Each individual page should be in story form: a first-or third-person account of living in this world that reflects on the educational/learning aspects as well as other facets of the the world (e.g., using a found 'memoir', a 'found' diary, or a news story about someone living in this world). Think 1000 words for a story, if you go over a bit, fine, though 1,500 words MAX.
 
Ensure you address aspects of learning and education: What is the relation between schools/education and the world you have built? What and how do people learn? Where, when do people we learn? How is curriculum understood/used (if there is one)? What tools are utilized? What is the role of the teacher (if there is one)? What about issues related to inclusion and access and equity?
 
* '''Tip''': Do not project too far into the future (in order to consider present concerns as well)  
* '''Tip''': Avoid dystopian or Utopian extremes: consider preferable futures as well (not only 'what if', but perhaps also what might be a preferable future, and how would we go about creating the foundations for such a future today?  
 
Add images sourced from [https://creativecommons.org/ creative commons] or the web [put the link at the bottom of the page as a reference].
 
Use images or the gallery tool somewhere on your future world home page.
 
While story is important, the goal is to create a coherent world that extrapolates on (or accelerates) current trends and conditions, and imagines future conditions and effects. Each member of the group should read the others' story pages. '''Each member should offer feedback and suggestions - and make sure that the world is (semi)consistent'''.
 
Use the following image from Dr. Brittany Tomin's dissertation work (2021) to help guide your brainstorming process. '''These are ideational helpers, not expectations.''' <ref>https://yorkspace.library.yorku.ca/xmlui/bitstream/handle/10315/39087/Tomin_Brittany_E_2021_PhD.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y</ref>
 
[[File:features.png|border|650px]]
 
'''[http://seriousplaylab.com/courses/7001/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/estrangement.pdf Estrangement]'''
 
'''[http://seriousplaylab.com/courses/7001/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/worldbuilding.pdf Building]'''
 
'''[http://seriousplaylab.com/courses/7001/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/novums.pdf Novums]'''
 
== Reflection on Process and Final Presentation ==
 
[[Test Page 1]]
 
For the final day of class, I will ask you to prepare, in your groups, a final presentation (with group slide deck) that explores ‘take away points’ for the Wikimedia project: How was this future of education inspired by your observations in the present? What process did you go through to construct your future narrative? What challenges did you face in imagining the ‘future’ of education? Which course ideas/texts (may have) guided your thinking in some way?
 
'''The Big Question:''' Did thinking critically about the future help you think critically about the present? If so, in what ways?
 
Any take away points from this course (in relation to technology, new media, education, learning, or your own uses of tools for learning/making outside if schools, in your lives)?
 
'''References'''

Latest revision as of 14:45, 22 January 2025

"Futures studies is the systematic study of possible, probable and preferable futures."

Tutorial

Introduction

This week we shift to a collaborative storytelling project using MediaWiki (the same basic coding platform as Wikipedia). There are a lots of wikis out there, and your school board tech should be able to set you up (or even install) one of these free systems on the server.

Worldbuilding.png

Our collective goal is to create a kind of storytelling ecology and to create, in groups, possible future worlds of education. In thinking about the future of education and learning, we also need to consider transformations in technology, culture, and (bio)physical environments.

These are the major questions at hand:

  • As things are now, what might the future of education look like? (If we 'extrapolate' - or say 'what if?')
  • Why is the work of looking forward and imagining possibility important for us, both in and beyond school contexts?
  • Does considering possible futures help us think critically about the present, past and future? Does, and how does, mapping possibility contribute to confidence and teacher agency, with regard to present and future challenges?

Collaborative World Building

Using the hand-outs as blueprints: you will (in groups of 3) imagine the future of education via speculative storytelling and world building. Your task is to come up with, and agree upon, some central facets of this new world like: year, state of society/politics, role of schooling (or if there are no more formal schooling institutions, how do we learn?), impacts of technology (e.g., extrapolate on social media, virtual reality ['meta'], generative AI, environmental issues, surveillance, social justice, transhumanism, politics, etc.) and related aspects of human life like identity, social roles, class structures, culture/s and language/s, EDI (equity, diversity, equality, decolonization) and so on. You will need to get together and do some brainstorming to piece this world together.

What trends do you see in the present? Then, while you extrapolate, consider the educational/learning practices and theories discussed in this course (or other courses) as resources for imagining/extrapolating and world building. Toronto is your focus (not Mars).

Once you have 'sketched out' a common world together, you will collaboratively write about what this world looks like, and how education/learning fits in, along with the rest. Course ideas/texts/theories might be used to guide your thinking in some way.

Science Fiction and Elements of World Building

Content (95%): Use world building techniques and processes of extrapolation, etc, (covered in class) to imagine the future of education in the form of a wiki page. To begin, you need to identify the larger, overarching problems facing education, schools, and youth today - and then consider a future condition or "state of affairs" in relation to these challenges or current problems - be them social/cultural, ecological, institutional (schools), pedagogical, and or technological. Consider (educational) questions related to equity, access, inclusion, diversity, and social justice.

Step 1: Build the world together (using encyclopedic format). Step 2: Create narrative pages (individual) (see below).

Consider the conditional term: "What if?" and review the handouts to help.

Each project should include both Wikipedia style entries as well as a first-or third-person narrative accounts of this ‘future’ (through the eyes of someone living in this imagined world). What do you imagine it will feel like to learn in the future? How will it look (if current challenges and problems are not dealt with; if new "innovations" are invented or applied)? For example, will we learn alone, or in community? What will be the role of technology in learning, in relation to pedagogy? How will we learn?

Technical Expectations

Create (as a group) a collaborative future world 'home page' using the Wikimedia encyclopedia format/genre of description. Think 2000-3000 words range as a group.

Create Your Individual Pages that link from your home page: Each individual page should be in story form: a first-or third-person account of living in this world that reflects on the educational/learning aspects as well as other facets of the the world (e.g., using a found 'memoir', a 'found' diary, or a news story about someone living in this world). Think 1000 words for a story, if you go over a bit, fine, though 1,500 words MAX.

Ensure you address aspects of learning and education: What is the relation between schools/education and the world you have built? What and how do people learn? Where, when do people we learn? How is curriculum understood/used (if there is one)? What tools are utilized? What is the role of the teacher (if there is one)? What about issues related to inclusion and access and equity?

  • Tip: Do not project too far into the future (in order to consider present concerns as well)
  • Tip: Avoid dystopian or Utopian extremes: consider preferable futures as well (not only 'what if', but perhaps also what might be a preferable future, and how would we go about creating the foundations for such a future today?

Add images sourced from creative commons or the web [put the link at the bottom of the page as a reference].

Use images or the gallery tool somewhere on your future world home page.

While story is important, the goal is to create a coherent world that extrapolates on (or accelerates) current trends and conditions, and imagines future conditions and effects. Each member of the group should read the others' story pages. Each member should offer feedback and suggestions - and make sure that the world is (semi)consistent.

Use the following image from Dr. Brittany Tomin's dissertation work (2021) to help guide your brainstorming process. These are ideational helpers, not expectations. [1]

Features.png

Estrangement

Building

Novums

Reflection on Process and Final Presentation

Test Page 1

For the final day of class, I will ask you to prepare, in your groups, a final presentation (with group slide deck) that explores ‘take away points’ for the Wikimedia project: How was this future of education inspired by your observations in the present? What process did you go through to construct your future narrative? What challenges did you face in imagining the ‘future’ of education? Which course ideas/texts (may have) guided your thinking in some way?

The Big Question: Did thinking critically about the future help you think critically about the present? If so, in what ways?

Any take away points from this course (in relation to technology, new media, education, learning, or your own uses of tools for learning/making outside if schools, in your lives)?

References