What should our online book club read next? After all, what better way to start a new year than by reading a book together!
(One note from our last reading: Benjamin Kahn published a fine blog post about Cathy O’Neil’s Weapons of Math Destruction. You can find all of my posts, your comments, and links about that important book here.)
If you’re new to the book club, know that since 2014 we’ve been reading titles that cover different ways of approaching education, technology, and the future. Books have included media history, near-future science fiction, education economics, anti-authoritarian schooling, changes in higher education, sociology of class, the emerging world of automation, and the 21st century’s most important work of economics so far.
Some authors have kindly interacted with us as we read their works. Several have engaged with us via Twitter, like Tressie Cottom and Malka Older. As our book club progressed, some of the authors have been guests on the Future Trends Forum; scroll down on that link and see.
Today’s poll is based on the latest one for nonfiction, back in fall 2017. I have cut several titles from previous lists that fail to win any votes, and added a couple of new ones that look exciting. You can see that there’s a mix of subjects, from pedagogy to technology, economics to online life, scholarly publishing and public policy. Most are pretty recent. Some will seem especially relevant to some of you based on current events.
Here’s the poll, if you’d like to jump right in. You get up to three (3) votes. If you want more information about the titles, just scroll down to the full list just below.
Below is the full list as a kind of annotated bibliography. I’ve linked to pages for each one, including those from publishers, Amazon, and the authors themselves, plus some relevant further readings (interviews, articles, etc.) and acknowledgements to the good folks who nominated several titles.
- Mark Carnes, Minds on Fire (publisher; Amazon) (2014). The co-creator of the Reacting to the Past education game movement explains it. Inside Higher Ed article.
- Allan Collins, Richard Halverson, Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology: The Digital Revolution and Schooling in America (2009) A Columbia Teachers’ College Press book about how education can change to best respond to technology.
- Martin Ford, Rise of the Robots (2015). A popular and accessible consideration of where automation might take us. (thanks to Jeff Mehring)
- Peter Frase, Four Futures: Life After Capitalism (publisher; Amazon) (2016). A bold quartet of futures, each a world powerfully reshaped by technology in different ways. Based on this 2011 article.
- Claudia Goldin and Lawrence F. Katz, The Race between Education and Technology. (publisher; Amazon) (2010). Explores how education changes to prepare students for technological shifts.
- Rajiv Jhangiani, Robert Biswas-Diener, Open: The Philosophy and Practices that are Revolutionizing Education and Science (2017). Explores open educational resources, open notebook science, and open access scholarship. Note that this book is available as a free download.
- John Markoff, Machines of Loving Grace (2015). A meditation on the future of automation based on examining human-computer interaction.
- Branko Milanovich, Global Inequality (2016). The most influential and up to date book on economic inequality worldwide.
- Angela Nagle, Kill All Normies (publisher; Amazon) (2017). A history and analysis of the lunatic fringe of online culture, from 4Chan on.
- Chris Newfield, The Great Mistake: How We Wrecked Public Universities and How We Can Fix Them. (publisher; Amazon). (2016) Focuses on the defunding of American public higher education. Professor Newfield was a guest on the Future Trends Forum this summer.
- Will Richardson and Rob Mancabelli, Personal Learning Networks: Using the Power of Connections to Transform Education. (publisher; Amazon) (2011) A serious look on connected learning, co-authored by a Future Trends Forum guest, and in its third edition.
- Jeff Selingo, College Unbound: The Future of Higher Education and What it Means for Students. (author’s page; Amazon) (2013). A critical examination of higher ed in transformation by one of the field’s leading journalists. Selingo was a Future Trends Forum guest this summer.
- Strauss and Howe, The Fourth Turning(1997). This is the big book about American generational theory, an ambitious interpretation of this nation’s culture, and a tool for getting at the future. It’s very much in the news now, as people seek to apply its model to either Trump or his opposition.
- Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind, The Future of the Professions How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts (2016). (thanks to Joe Murphy for the suggestion)
- Peter Temin, The Vanishing Middle Class: Prejudice and Power in a Dual Economy (Amazon; publisher) (2017). A cutting-edge examination of economic inequality in the United States.
- Fred Turner, The Democratic Surround: Multimedia and American Liberalism from World War II to the Psychedelic Sixties (publisher; Amazon) (2013). A deep dive into the origins of multimedia technology as a democratic and psychological project.
- Zeynep Tufekci, Twitter and Teargas: The Power and Fragility of Networked Protest (MIT: 2017). (thanks to Kyle Johnson)
- Kelly and Zach Weinersmith, Soonish: Ten Emerging Technologies That’ll Improve and/or Ruin Everything (home page; Amazon) (2017). Zack is the creator of the amazing and amazingly prolific Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal webcomic. Kelly is a parasitologist. Together they dive deeply into a mix of technologies, based on scholarship and interviews with practitioners.
You can vote in this poll, and also add thoughts in comments below. You can support up to three titles.
I’m looking forward to your choices!
PS: soon I’ll launch a bookstore where you can purchase these titles.
Snap. I thought I had suggested “Robot-proof: Higher education in the age of artificial intelligence.”
Maybe next time!
Aw, heck, Scott. I simply forget to include it. Shoot – I’m sorry.
I can’t edit the poll once it launches.
Hm… should I just pick it for the next reading?
Again, I’m sorry. I really appreciate the nomination.
No worries! Plenty of great choices in this batch!
Bryan, I was in this book club for the science fiction. Has that focus been dropped? Thanks, Sandy
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maybe it’s time to have both together with The Diamond Age
No, we’re just alternating between sf and nonfiction.
I was leaning towards sf for this session, but people seem pretty dour – dour in a way that suggests wanting to study, rather than escape.
PS: Sandy, how can the rest of us keep up with your sf readings?
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