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November 14, 2023

How Do Humanities Majors Fare in the Work Force?

By
Audrey Williams June
Source
The Chronicle of Higher Education
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The wisdom of seeking a degree in the humanities is often called into question, with administrators perennially seeking to  majors, state officials  them, and professors debating how best to  their worth. Meanwhile, the number of bachelor鈥檚 degrees awarded in the humanities declined nearly 16 percent between 2012 and 2020.

But a new report from the 亚色影库app contradicts the narrative that humanities degrees are a waste of money. College graduates in every state who majored in humanities fields like history, philosophy, and English literature outearned people with no degree, according to the academy鈥檚 data.

Robert B. Townsend, the academy鈥檚 program director for humanities, arts, and culture, said the data were generated in response to administrators鈥 and faculty members鈥 requests for information that could be used to show lawmakers that humanities majors have positive career outcomes at the state level 鈥 just as the academy found they do nationally.

In general, he said, the questions about the return on investment for humanities degrees seem to move in two directions.

鈥淥ne is you might as well not even get a degree if you鈥檙e going to get a humanities degree, and the other is the comparison to the engineering graduates 鈥 who are in a class by themselves as far as earnings,鈥 Townsend said.

However, he said, the new data show that humanities majors aren鈥檛 largely unemployed and their earnings are comparable to or better than the salaries of workers who majored in most non-humanities fields.

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Related

Project

Humanities Indicators

Chairs
Norman Marshall Bradburn and Robert B. Townsend