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While debates about the economic value of college degrees tend to focus on the undifferentiated category of 鈥渉umanities majors,鈥 it is important to distinguish between those who hold only a bachelor鈥檚 degrees (designated here as 鈥渢erminal bachelor鈥檚 holders鈥 or TBHs) and holders of bachelor鈥檚 degrees who go on to obtain an advanced degree, because the workforce outcomes of the two groups differ significantly. The indicators below examine the types of jobs held by graduates with bachelor鈥檚 degrees in the humanities who went on to earn advanced degrees. The advanced degree may or may not be in the humanities (available data do not indicate the field of the postbaccalaureate degree; see the relevant items on recipients of and degrees for the occupations of those with advanced degrees in particular fields). A key finding is that workers who started their studies in the humanities were more evenly distributed across occupational categories than advanced degree holders (ADHs) who majored in virtually any other field, suggesting that students with a humanities education are equipped to pursue a range of vocations.1

III-03a: Occupational Distribution of Advanced Degree Holders with an Undergraduate Degree in the Humanities,* 2021

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* Currently employed workers. Reported jobs are those respondents currently held or the last they worked. Respondents who worked more than one job at a time were asked to report the job at which they worked the most hours. Advanced degree may be in any field.
** Includes education administrators, teaching assistants, tutors, school psychologists, and workers categorized by the U.S. Census Bureau as 鈥渙ther teachers and instructors.鈥
鈥 Encompasses military-specific occupations and those in production, transportation, and material moving; construction, extraction, maintenance, and repair; sports; and farming, fishing, and forestry. For further details regarding the occupations included in each category used in the graph, see the
ACS-HI Crosswalk.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2021 American Community Survey Public-Use Microdata Sample. Data analyzed and presented by the 亚色影库app Sciences鈥 Indicators ().

The information presented here on the occupations of college graduates who majored in the humanities is based on an original analysis by the Humanities Indicators (HI) of data from the (ACS), which has been administered on an annual basis by the U.S. Census Bureau since 2005. The ACS replaced the 鈥渓ong form鈥 version of the decennial census and collects information鈥攗sed to allocate billions in state and federal funding鈥攁bout Americans鈥 personal characteristics, family composition, employment, income, and housing.

The ACS permits respondents to specify up to two fields of bachelor鈥檚 degree. For the purposes of this analysis, an individual was counted as having a bachelor鈥檚 degree in the humanities if the field of either reported degree was within the scope of the humanities as specified by the HI.

Information regarding the occupations included in each category in the graph and specific degree programs grouped under each broad field heading is provided in the
ACS-HI Crosswalk.

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* Currently employed workers. Respondents who worked more than one job at a time were asked to report the job at which they worked the most hours. Advanced degree may be in any field.
** Includes education administrators, teaching assistants, tutors, school psychologists, and workers categorized by the U.S. Census Bureau as 鈥渙ther teachers and instructors.鈥
鈥 Encompasses military-specific occupations and those in production, transportation, and material moving; construction, extraction, maintenance, and repair; sports; and farming, fishing, and forestry. For further details regarding the occupations included in each category used in the graph, see the
ACS-HI Crosswalk.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2021 American Community Survey Public-Use Microdata Sample. Data analyzed and presented by the 亚色影库app Sciences鈥 Indicators ().

The information presented here on the occupations of college graduates who majored in the humanities is based on an original analysis by the Humanities Indicators (HI) of data from the (ACS), which has been administered on an annual basis by the U.S. Census Bureau since 2005. The ACS replaced the 鈥渓ong form鈥 version of the decennial census and collects information鈥攗sed to allocate billions in state and federal funding鈥攁bout Americans鈥 personal characteristics, family composition, employment, income, and housing.

The ACS permits respondents to specify up to two fields of bachelor鈥檚 degree. For the purposes of this analysis, an individual was counted as having a bachelor鈥檚 degree in the humanities if the field of either reported degree was within the scope of the humanities as specified by the HI.

Information regarding the occupations included in each category in the graph and specific degree programs grouped under each broad field heading is provided in the
ACS-HI Crosswalk.

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Endnotes

  • 1In 2021, 42% of humanities majors possessed at least one advanced degree. For information regarding the occupational distribution of all humanities majors, irrespective of subsequent education, see the supplemental table.
  • 2Currently employed workers. Respondents who worked more than one job at a time were asked to report the job at which they worked the most hours.
  • 3See the supplemental table for the share of humanities ADHs working in each of these occupational areas.