Black Futures Reader

Year: 2019

Black Futures Reader

A collection of recommended media to experience more Black Futures.

Future Tense Fiction: Double Spiral

By Marcy Kelly

10 Innovative IT Projects to Inspire You This Fall

by Jen A. Miller, EdTech

Future Tense Fiction: What the Dead Man Said

By Chinelo Onwualu

We Need a New Science of Progress

by Patrick Collison and Tyler Cowen, The Atlantic

Announcing Future Tense Fiction: Stories of Tomorrow

by Torie Bosch, SLATE

Review: Future Tense Fiction

Kirkus Reviews

Frankenstein at 200

By Renee Anderson Lawfare

Future Tense Fiction: Zero in Babel

By E. Lily Yu

Wired Magazine Logo

Can Sci-Fi Writers Prepare Us for an Uncertain Future?

by Rose Eveleth, WIRED

Facing the Pariah of Science: The Frankenstein Myth as a Social and Ethical Reference for Scientists

 Peter Nagy,  Ruth Wylie, Joey Eschrich, Ed Finn Science and Engineering Ethics

‘Spider-Man: Far From Home’: How Realistic Is Mysterio’s Illusion Technology?

by Trey Williams, The Wrap (Yahoo)

Character looks at an interface of AI

Should we make AI more human?

Patrick McGurrin

2019 Campbell and Sturgeon Awards Winners

Locus Magazine

Future Tense Fiction: Space Leek

By Chen Qiufan

ISLS logo, a circle arrow with a starburst of 3 lines over it, with the letters ISLS

Co-Design for Learner Help-Giving Across Physical and Digital Contexts

Ahmed, I., Girotto, V., Mawasi, A., Whitehurst, A., Wylie, R., & Walker, E.
International Conference on the Learning Sciences

A close up photo of a computer screen with unreadable numbers and words stack on each other and all different colors.

Investigating help-giving behavior in a cross-platform learning environment

Ahmed, I., Mawasi, A., Wang, S., Wylie, R., Bergner, Y., Whitehurst, A., & Walker, E
International Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Education

Higher Education: Arizona State University’s Partnership With James Turrell’s Roden Crater Has Much to Teach Museums

by Andy Battaglia, ARTnews

Starred Review:Future Tense Fiction: Stories of Tomorrow

Publishers Weekly