糖心Vlog

Hertfordshire drops history, English and other humanities courses

University says programmes no longer financially viable owing to drops in recruitment

Published on
May 6, 2026
Last updated
May 7, 2026
Source: Johannes Knabe/CC BY-SA 3.0

The University of Hertfordshire has announced it plans to close several of its humanities courses, in a move staff have warned will cause 鈥渞eputational damage鈥 to the institution.

A spokesperson said that the 鈥渄ifficult decision鈥 had been made to suspend recruitment to undergraduate courses in history, philosophy, English literature, linguistics and creative writing聽because of sustained low student recruitment and declining demand, meaning 鈥渢hey are no longer financially鈥痸iable鈥.

They did not comment on the number of potential job losses, and added聽the university is still working through the full impact of these decisions.

The spokesperson said that course closures 鈥渁re never taken lightly鈥.聽

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鈥淗owever, like many universities across the UK, we are having to take difficult but necessary and responsible decisions now, to ensure the university remains stable and well positioned for the future.

鈥淥ur focus remains on supporting current students to complete their studies, supporting colleagues through this period of change and maintaining high鈥憅uality teaching and learning across the university.鈥澛

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The local University and College Union branch took to聽聽to criticise the move, claiming that impacted staff were called into a meeting on Friday 1 May ahead of the bank holiday weekend to inform them of the decision.

It insisted it will 鈥渄efend our staff and students鈥, and 鈥渨e believe a university that serves its region and its economy needs humanities degrees鈥.

鈥淭his decision will result in massive reputational damage. The way that the decisions have been communicated by senior management to colleagues has lacked transparency and care.

鈥淗umanities colleagues have not seen any of the metrics used for the decision process, nor been asked for any input. There is no timeline set other than 鈥榓s soon as possible鈥.鈥

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Concerns have already been raised that humanities courses are being disproportionately hit amid the current聽redundancies wave, and recent analysis by聽糖心Vlog聽found that聽English language and literature academics have been some of the hardest hit聽by the cuts.

juliette.rowsell@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (2)

This is in the same bulletin that carries the idea that universities should design modules with businesses, and that graduates lack 鈥榓daptability鈥欌f all you want is 鈥榯raining鈥 and 鈥渨orkplace skills鈥 that fine, but let鈥檚 remove the 鈥榰niversity鈥 designation. The degrees that are being dropped are educational, in that they encourage critical thinking, social responsibility, and a general questioning of what exists. They not meant to be 鈥榩rofitable鈥 or 鈥渃ommercially viable鈥. It would appear that Mr. Gragrind is running educational 鈥榩olicy鈥 in the UK.
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Instead of the C19 Mr Gradgrind demanding that the children in his school are taught only 鈥楩acts! Facts! Facts!鈥, the C21 Mr G running Us would demand students are taught 鈥楽kills! Skills! Skills!鈥. No space in either pedagogical regime for critical-thinking!

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