Journal article
Arts and Humanities in Higher Education, vol. 21(3), 2021
PhD Candidate | Instructional Designer | Content Editor | Educator | Researcher | Musician
PhD Candidate | Educator | Instructional Designer | Researcher | Musician
Humanities Department
York University
PhD Candidate | Instructional Designer | Content Editor | Educator | Researcher | Musician
Humanities Department
York University
APA
Click to copy
Steele, S. (2021). Speculating on the liberal arts: Exploring possible futures for humanities education. Arts and Humanities in Higher Education, 21(3). https://doi.org/10.1177/14740222211050551
Chicago/Turabian
Click to copy
Steele, Sean. “Speculating on the Liberal Arts: Exploring Possible Futures for Humanities Education.” Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 21, no. 3 (2021).
MLA
Click to copy
Steele, Sean. “Speculating on the Liberal Arts: Exploring Possible Futures for Humanities Education.” Arts and Humanities in Higher Education, vol. 21, no. 3, 2021, doi:10.1177/14740222211050551.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{sean2021a,
title = {Speculating on the liberal arts: Exploring possible futures for humanities education},
year = {2021},
issue = {3},
journal = {Arts and Humanities in Higher Education},
volume = {21},
doi = {10.1177/14740222211050551},
author = {Steele, Sean}
}
The article draws on concepts from speculative design to explore an alternative educational group existing outside the boundaries of an accredited university. Inspired by the imaginative approach of speculative design, I propose a small-scale reading and discussion group as a pathway to explore possible futures open to aspects of humanities education. The concept aims to reposition elements of the humanities from within the degree-granting Canadian university space to engage the wider public through a network meant to ideally foster an interconnected community of learners. This rhizomatic network would provide avenues for those without the means, access, or desire to pursue post-secondary education in the humanities to engage in questions that are relevant to their lived experience. I use an inquiry-based model of learning to explore probable, plausible, and preferable futures for liberal arts education as a way to challenge some current modes of thinking and provoke further discussion and research.