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Late Adolescence Approaches to The Future

Students in Late Adolescence:
... have a developing sense of themselves as active players who have some responsibility for the direction of community life, and are often concerned about major social and environmental issues and the ethical implications of human activity and knowledge.

The future is a stimulating topic for young people on the verge of adulthood. By providing students with a wide range of thought-provoking material to read, reflect upon and debate, teachers can foster students' interest in the world's future and encourage them to recognise that they can play some part in determining the course of events. This may involve making pragmatic decisions about further study and careers or considering moral and ethical questions about lifestyle choices.

As with Early Adolescence an obvious approach to the theme is to explore these issues through an examination of the science fiction genre, but at a more sophisticated level.

Another approach to is to focus on modern issues books dealing with concerns that may confront young adults as they embark on life beyond school moving into the tomorrow of adulthood.



Where should I start?
Click on the approaches listed below for learning ideas and fiction titles to get you started.
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MARSDEN, John. Prayer for the Twenty-first Century
Lothian, 1997
This is an engaging book with a thoughtful message for people of all ages. It is an elegantly-crafted prayer in which the sentiments are immediately recognised and strike a chord in the heart of the reader.

The first stanza uses the symbol of travel to explore the idea of life choices and of the endurance of traditional values.
The second stanza is devoted to matters of life - the conservation of nature, the endurance of the human spirit, the need for understanding of others, and the desire to see our children lead fulfilled lives.

Adding to the text are the visual images which have been carefully designed to provoke further thought. These images range from black on cream line drawings through black and white photography to highly-coloured reproductions of prints, photographs and paintings.

In combination, the images of the text make thought-provoking points of departure for discussion. The poem as a whole is an excellent opener for class exploration of the key issues and shared values of our times.


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The Future World - Science Fiction?

The Future theme invites readers to reflect upon the nature of our present society and the future of the world. Teachers looking for a means of generating interest in the topic and thoughtful debate on the issues, will find that science fiction is the ideal stimulus.

Once introduced to the genre most adolescent students will be hooked. As much science fiction deals with space technology, space travel, life on other planets, or wars, and is often action-packed and exciting, it appeals to reluctant male readers.

Science fiction can also be very amusing and entertaining, presenting a tongue-in-cheek viewpoint. Mature and reflective readers of both genders relate to the ethical and moral dilemmas incorporated in the stories. Issues such as organ transplants, genetic engineering, cloning and environmental disasters are common themes to explore.



Learning Ideas
Students can:
  • Discuss how the future is presented in current sci-fi novels.
  • Determine whether there is a common theme in science fiction novels written by different contemporary authors.
  • Compare science fiction written 10, 20 or more years ago with more recent titles.
  • Identify common elements in science fiction writing.
  • Debate the ethical or moral issues raised in the novels.
  • Investigate how young people today envisage the future of the world.
  • Research current scientific, medical and technological developments and discuss the feasibility of the future scenarios depicted in novels.
  • Examine classic science fiction, by writers such as Isaac Asimov, George Orwell, Aldous Huxley, H.G. Wells, John Christopher, Ray Bradbury, Robert Heinlein and John Wyndham. Identify the extent to which their predictions in terms of scientific and technological advancements have been realised in the modern world.
  • Study one author who has written over a long time span and compare their early visions of the future with later ones.
  • Write their own science fiction story.

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Books to Support the Theme

CASWELL, Brian. The View from Ararat
University of Qld Press, 1999
Age 14+   Imagine an alien bug which can survive on an inanimate object indefinitely, in air or in a vacuum, at temperatures approaching absolute zero and then cross over to a living individual and start spreading like a bushfire through a whole population.


Eyes on the line

DANN, Jack and WEBB, Janeen [Ed].
Dreaming Down-Under
HarperCollins, 1998
Age 15+   Dreaming Down-under is a collection of fantasy and science fiction stories by well known Australian authors. The collection is typical of other recent anthologies, with some cyberpunk, some 'what if' stories, some fantasy and some more traditional science fiction (time-travel, alien encounters).

Eyes on the line

Goodman, Alison. Singing the Dogstar Blues
HarperCollins, 1998
Age 13+   Free-spirited Joss is late for the Partnering ceremony. Camden-Stone may just use this against her, to have her removed from the exclusive Time-travel program, that is until the alien, Mavkel, chooses her as his Time Jump partner. Accepting the partnership throws Joss into a world of hi-tech security, death treats and protests from the Anti-Alien Lobby.


Eyes on the line

Nix, Garth. Shades Children

Allen & Unwin, 1997
Age 13+   In this future, when Earth goes through the 'Change', all adults and children over the age of sixteen disappear. All remaining children are rounded up by 'creatures' and herded into dormitories where they are housed, fed and educated until they reach the age of fourteen.

Through the sacrifice of his brother Petar, Gold-Eye escapes from the dormitories and joins a group called Shades Children.

Eyes on the line

PRICE, Susan.
The Sterkarm Handshake
Scholastic Press, 1998
Age 15+   The breadth of vision, its clever intertwining of history, folklore and the future and its believable moral code, so different to our own, make this book a wonderful read.


Winner 1998 Guardian Children's Fiction Award.

Eyes on the line

Rogers-Davidson, Sally. Spare Parts
Penguin, 1999
Age 13+   Kelty is a C-grade citizen of Greater Melbourne metropolis, the city of the future, dominated by the skywalkers, A- and B-grade citizens who have all the power and privileges.

To escape her dreary, futureless life, Kelty donates her perfect body for transplant. Kelty thus becomes a cybermorph; her brain transplanted into a top-of-the-range artificial body while her human body goes to a recipient who needs a replacement.


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Approaching Adulthood: The Edge of Tomorrow!

The following novels can be used to generate lively discussion about life choice issues relevant to teenagers on the edge of adulthood:
  • career and education choices
  • workplace initiation/bullying
  • sexuality
  • relationships
  • drugs
Refer also to the books listed in the Values and Ethics section which deal with more controversial aspects of these topics or are for more mature readers.


EARLS, Nick. 48 Shades of Brown
Penguin, 1999
This funny book has real-life appeal for upper secondary readers, particularly boys.


Winner CBC Book of the Year: Older Readers, 2000

Eyes on the line

HERRICK, Steven. A place like this
University of Queensland Press, 1998
Age 13+   Jack, the hero of Steven Herrick's earlier verse novel, Love, Ghosts and Nose Hair, has grown up, left school, tried university, but found it 'too serious'. Still totally infatuated with the lovely Annabel, Jack starts to realise marking time isn't enough and he is soon convinced that he wants to leave town.


Eyes on the line

KELLEHER, Annette. Pumpkin Head Is Dead!
Margaret Hamilton Books, 1999
Age 15+   Written in a first person narrative, the reader is compelled to walk in the shoes of Fingula O'Shea as she goes through her summer holidays before starting Year 12. It is not a happy time for Fingula. Neither is it for the rest of her immediate family; her brother Connor and her mother.



Eyes on the line

McCARTHY, Maureen. Queen Kat, Carmel and St. Jude Get a Life
Penguin, 1999
Age 15+   The scenario is that of three country girls, barely known to one another, sharing a house in Melbourne at the start of university life. It is a slow start, owing to the need to set up all three heroines, their families and homes to the last eyelash. There is the problem of length for many potential readers who could otherwise be swept along with the soap opera mix of nasty, but gorgeous girl who finally makes it, fat girl who finally makes it and fiery crusader who finally makes it.

Queen Kat, Carmel and St. Jude get a life
was screened on the ABC in 1999.


Eyes on the line

MCCARTHY, Maureen. Chain of Hearts
Penguin, 1999
This cleverly crafted, immensely readable family saga, peopled with recognisable characters will absorb readers from Year 10 upwards, especially girls.


Eyes on the line

McROBBIE, David. Tyro
Penguin, 1999
Age 14+   Set in a Scottish shipyard in 1953, Tyro focuses on the practice of bullying the new apprentices. Although it is set in Scotland some years ago, from all accounts it really could be 1999 in any shipyard or tradesman/apprentice work situation right here 'in our own backyard'. This somewhat controversial topic is dealt with very realistically, especially those who may be seriously considering leaving school to take up an apprenticeship or first full-time job.

Also available as an audio book.
Eyes on the line

METZENTHEN, David. Falling Forward
Omnibus, 1998
Age 14+   This is an extremely engaging book. Told in a direct and uncomplicated use of third person narrative unspoken questions underpin the plot. These questions are commonly asked by all people at various stages of their lives: What if? What if this had happened? What if I had never met that person? Through the character of Bruce Daffin, 'tattooed with loneliness', we are able to ask and explore these questions, as he meets Troy Spinks - who is everything Bruce is not and has a suppressed yearning to be.


Eyes on the line

MOLONEY, James. Angela
University of Queensland Press, 1998
Age 16+   Angela and her best friend Gracey, an Aboriginal girl from a small community in an outback country town, have reached the end of their school years and are graduating from a prestigious Brisbane school. Both girls have their sights set on getting into courses offered by the University of Queensland and living in Brisbane. Angela looks forward to the coming year when they will continue their deep friendship into the next seemingly predictable stage of their lives. The security of her white background with all its backing of the accepted establishment and her well-educated, supportive family, blinds her to the difficulties which could arise for her friend.


Eyes on the line

SHEAHAN, Robyn [Compiler]. Original Sin
University of Queensland Press, 1996
Age 14+   The concept behind this anthology of Australian short stories is an interesting one. All fourteen stories are by different authors and all deal with the problems and dilemmas of adolescents as they struggle towards adulthood in the last decade of the twentieth century.


Eyes on the line

ROY, James. Full Moon Racing
University of Queensland Press, 1998
Age 15+   Is there a difference between running away from home and leaving home? The characters in this story are very definite that there is a tremendous difference. The first is a reaction to situations one finds oneself in, while the other is a determination to do things differently and to suit oneself.


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Values and Ethics in Tomorrow's World

Important, often controversial, issues that may confront students as they enter adulthood are well handled in these titles and are certain to motivate interesting classroom debate:
  • teenage pregnancy
  • abortion
  • crime
  • drugs
  • relationships
  • valuing others
  • decision making


FIENBERG, Anna. Borrowed Light
Allen & Unwin, 1999
Age 15+   While this is a book about a dysfunctional family, it will probably be seen primarily as a novel about teenage abortion.


Eyes on the line

HARTNETT, Sonya. All My Dangerous Friends
Viking, 1998
Age 15+   This is a nasty book! Well, the subject matter is anyway. The blurb on the back cover describes the novel as 'darkly funny'. I did not find anything about it at all funny. Rather it depicts most believably a disturbing world of young middle-class criminals who steal, deal in drugs, shoplift and worse.


Hartnett offers the reader a lot to think about and All My Dangerous Friends will spark lots of discussion with older, mature students.

Eyes on the line

LANAGAN, Margo. The Best Thing
Allen & Unwin, 1995
Age 15+   When the reader meets the main character, Melanie, she is in the middle of an emotional crisis. She has recently miscarried a baby, she had been about to abort. Her mother provides some support, but it is not enough to counteract the joking and teasing she endures from her friends.


Eyes on the line

LANAGAN, Margo. Touching Earth Lightly
Allen & Unwin, 1996
Age 15+   Essentially, Touching Earth Lightly is the story of the relationship between two girls in their late teens who have starkly different backgrounds.

We are not prepared with knowledge of their circumstances when confronted, in the first pages, with Janey lying post-coital in a wrecked-car dump. She has had sex with two boys while Chloe, the non-participant, hangs around rather disconsolately, if not slightly bored by the whole thing. These are certainly challenging images of sexuality. Make no mistake; this is a strong, mature and inspiring piece of writing.


Eyes on the line

LUCASHENKO, Melissa. Steam Pigs
University of Queensland Press, 1997
Age 15+   This book gives an insight into the cultural and emotional problems faced by an Aboriginal girl who leaves home to live in a city far from her family and her cultural background.


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