Scientifically Accurate Sci-Fi for High-Schoolers?
Raul654 asks: "A member of my immediate family is a biology teacher at an all-girls high school. For some years, she's been giving her students the option to earn extra credit by reading a science-related book. What scientifically accurate science fiction books would you recommend for high school readers?"
Make them Star Wars comics. Extra credit in an exam for explaining the internal mechanics of a lightsaber.
A full scholarship for anyone who builds a working lightsaber.
I can't find the post, but slashdot is finally being asked to do a high schoolers homework. It's official now, slashdot has jumped the shark.
Maybe the King James Version?
Any decent sci-fi should have at least a basing in science (the sci-): and then 'jazz it up' a bit to appeal to the non-PhD holding reader. For example, I recall using a sci-fi film as an introduction to Genetics and the issue of ethics in science. Our teacher made it clear that it was a work of fiction, but the point was to get us thinking about the topic. I think the tactic worked pretty well. Of course, there is also heaps of 'Popular Science' out there, which is as easy to read as sci-fi and more informative. Personally, I recommend Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time, but if you want something more Biology, anything by Jarred Diamond (Guns, Germs and Steel, The Third Chimpanzee, etc) is excellent.
kill all the fucking niggers
Hitch Hikers guide to the galaxy it will put things in perspective for them "In the beginning the universe was created, This has made a lot of people angry and has been widely regarded as a bad move"
An almost sure fire way of getting the parents more involved would be choosing some of Heinlein's last books in the Lazurus Long series. Of course the teacher might ought to keep their spacesuit handy and rocket warmed up.