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Important discipline or a poor investment?: arts and humanities degrees are at risk of being pushed into the private sector as state governments favour job-orientated science courses
Some history professors in Florida are paying more attention these days to the future than to the past.
The historians have organised themselves to promote the value of their discipline against a growing sentiment that history is 鈥渘on-strategic鈥 in an economy that needs more engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs and workers in the health professions.
This is no longer just an academic issue. Like several other US politicians, Florida鈥檚 governor, Republican Rick Scott, has questioned whether taxpayers should continue fully subsidising public universities to teach subjects he says are in low demand. Academics in the humanities and some social sciences fear this threatens the survival of their departments.
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鈥淚f I鈥檓 going to take money from a citizen to put into education, then I鈥檓 going to take that money to create jobs,鈥 Scott told the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. 鈥淚s it a vital interest of the state to have more anthropologists? I don鈥檛 think so.鈥
The Republican governors of North Carolina and Wisconsin have made similar pronouncements. 鈥淚f you want to take gender studies that鈥檚 fine. Go to a private school and take it,鈥 said North Carolina鈥檚 governor, Patrick McCrory.
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鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 want to subsidise that if that鈥檚 not going to get someone a job.鈥
Wisconsin鈥檚 governor, Scott Walker, has said that public technical colleges in his state should be judged on whether 鈥測oung people [are] getting degrees in jobs that are open and needed today, not just the jobs that the universities want to give us鈥.
This debate about the relative worth of the sciences versus the humanities is not new. But it has been propelled by the escalating cost of higher education.
As students fall deeper into debt to pay for their tuition, more than two- thirds now believe the goal of going to a university is to increase their earning power, according to research by Arthur Levine, president emeritus of Teachers College, Columbia University.
About 88 per cent of this year鈥檚 first-year undergraduates in the US say that 鈥済etting a better job鈥 is the top reason they enrolled, according to a survey by the University of California, Los Angeles鈥 糖心Vlog Research Institute (The American Freshman: National Norms Fall 2012). In 2006, 71 per cent gave that reason.

Internal division
The debate has even driven a wedge between conventional four-year universities and some two-year community colleges, which enrol about half of the nation鈥檚 post-secondary students and typically focus on vocational education.
鈥淚t is time we all accept the fact that a traditional four-year liberal arts education is a poor investment for America鈥檚 middle class,鈥 Tom Snyder, president of Ivy Tech Community College in Indiana, has written. 鈥淭oday鈥檚 economy cannot support more art history or philosophy majors.鈥
In response, several associations of universities with four-year courses are fighting back. The Association of American Colleges and Universities (AAC&U) is aggressively advocating the importance of imparting 鈥渂road knowledge and transferable skills鈥. And the Council of Independent Colleges has established a Campaign for the Liberal Arts that will provide research and data to dispel stereotypes about the discipline.
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鈥淭here is a new and heightened perception driving this trend that associations and organisations need to help the public better understand the value of the liberal arts,鈥 said Laura Wilcox, the council鈥檚 spokeswoman.
The organisations contend that what employers really want from universities is not job training but graduates who can think critically, write and speak well, and solve problems.
鈥淸Employers] say, 鈥業 want an engineer who can talk to people. I want an engineer who can write a memo. I want an engineer who doesn鈥檛 act like a goof.鈥 Everybody rolls their eyes when [employers] do that, but the data says they鈥檙e right,鈥 said Anthony Carnevale, director of the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce.
An AAC&U survey of corporate executives found that nearly 90 per cent want workers with verbal and written communication skills, 75 per cent are looking for graduates who understand ethical decision-making, and 70 per cent say they need innovative and creative employees.
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鈥淣one of this is to [criticise] the disciplines of science and engineering and technology, but we also need to train people in the art of understanding the world around them, where they fit into society and all of those sorts of things,鈥 said Norman Goda, a history professor at the University of Florida who has helped to organise a petition against the governor鈥檚 proposal to charge lower fees for 鈥渟trategic鈥 majors in high workplace demand and more for 鈥渘on-strategic鈥 - largely humanities - majors, such as history.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 predict the downfall of man if there are fewer history majors but the cumulative effect over decades would surely not be a good one,鈥 he added.

Class divisions
Others say the trend could deepen class divisions as some students will continue to be able to afford a humanities education while others will have no choice but to seek specific job skills.
鈥淭he rich get education and the poor get training,鈥 Carnevale said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a way of reproducing class. The higher education system is now in cahoots with the economy to reproduce class.鈥 Already, he added, 鈥渢here are a lot of kids who are not getting a real education any more. They鈥檙e getting training.鈥
Reversing that shift will not be easy. The proportion of students majoring in the humanities has already fallen to just 8 per cent, according to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, down from a peak of more than 17 per cent in 1967.
鈥淭he issue of questioning the value of the liberal arts has been going on for more than just the past few years. It鈥檚 been going on for decades,鈥 Goda said.
鈥淧art of the problem that the liberal arts has always had is that you really cannot quantify what we do.
鈥淭he possibility of someone with a nursing degree going into nursing is very, very high. Someone with an English degree or a history degree could go into any one of a number of fields. They train you for a number of careers - not necessarily one,鈥 he added.
More likely to get a job
Yet no matter what the university associations say, students with degrees in the sciences are incontrovertibly more likely to get a job and make more money than graduates in the humanities. The unemployment rate in 2012 for recent history majors was 10.2 per cent, compared with 7.5 per cent for students who majored in engineering, the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce reports.
The National Association of Colleges and Employers reports that humanities and social science graduates earn $36,988 (拢24,437) a year compared with $61,913 for engineering graduates.
鈥淭here鈥檚 more and more tension about this, especially as prices go up,鈥 Carnevale said.
That tension is clearly being felt in history departments and by faculty in other humanities disciplines.
鈥淲hen tenured faculty retire, they鈥檙e not going to be replaced,鈥 Goda said. 鈥淲hat you may have, and what you have had, is the detritus of history, English and political science departments being combined into a department of humanities.
鈥淎nd once you tear down departments like those, it鈥檚 tough, if it鈥檚 possible at all, to restore them.鈥
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