Hi, today we explore: The decline of humanities degrees. TOGETHER WITH Today's Topics Good morning. With October being National Arts & Humanities Month in [the US]( â and the fall semester now in full swing for college students â weâre exploring that seemingly ever-rarer educational pursuit: the humanities degree. Today's Chartr is brought to you by [Flourish]( â one of our team's favorite data visualization tools we've ever used. From lines to areas, bars to bee swarms, [Flourish]( can produce some of the most stunning data visualizations youâve ever seen.* [Read this on the web instead]( Subjects to change Fittingly, perhaps, how you define âthe humanitiesâ is up for debate. The National Endowment for the Humanities, a federal agency established [in 1965]( sets out at least 12 subjects within the field â the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, on the other hand, whittles it down to just 4 core areas in [one measure](. Weâre opting for the latter in our analysis, but however you choose to slice and dice the data, the conclusions leave little room for nuanced discussion: the humanities are in trouble. With the cost of college rising with nearly every [year that passes]( students are beginning to question the inherent worth of humanities majors. Whether itâs exploring the linguistic intricacies of James Joyceâs Ulysses, digging into the military strategies of Chinese dynasties, or attempting to pick apart the theories of long-standing titans in the philosophical arena, fewer college goers are willing to devote years of their educational careers to the traditionally âsofterâ subjects. Les Misérables The fall of the humanities is not a new phenomenon â there was a [swathe]( of pieces [written]( on the [topic]( this time 10 years ago. But since then, humanities majors have become an even rarer sight on campuses: the number of bachelorâs degrees awarded in English, a subject often placed [at the heart]( of the decline, has fallen every year since the 2011-12 academic period. Indeed, last year only 33,249 students completed bachelor degrees in English Language and Literature/Letters, compared to over 55,000 in 2009. Other key humanities subjects like history and foreign languages, literature, & linguistics have followed similar trajectories, down 39% and 36%, respectively, from their 2010s peaks. While the popularity of courses in the humanities has been taking a serious hit, other subjects have been making up ground, as students look to put their [increasingly-costly]( college focus in other areas. Classics vs. coding 20 years ago, roughly 8% of all US bachelor degrees were attained in the 4 core humanities subjects â a figure thatâs fallen every year since 2007, with the share now sitting at just 4% per data from the National Center for Education Statistics. Conversely, STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering and math) have been growing at an [unparalleled pace]( as students swap Charles Dickens for computational dynamics and Jane Austen for Javascript. Indeed, computer science has risen from a 2.7% share of all degrees in 2009 to 5.4% by the end of 2022, while engineering has risen from 7.2% to 9.4% in the same time frame â more than double the share that the core humanities subjects currently occupy. Man vs. machine The rise of computer science as a subject is particularly interesting. The oft-repeated âlearn to codeâ mantra likely rings loud in the ears of the 49% of arts and humanities majors who wish theyâd studied in a different field, per the most recent Economic Wellbeing of US Households [survey](. Things might be starting to change, though, as the development of coding bots and generative AI threatens, ironically, computer scienceâs status as a â[safe major](. Interestingly, advocates of the humanities have been pointing to the burgeoning world of artificial intelligence as evidence of the importance of attributes that students can hone in humanities classes â like situational awareness and developing a personal voice â or âdistinctly human skillsâ, in comparison to coding, as a New York Times writer posited [recently](. [Sponsored by Flourish]( How do we make our charts? Thatâs a question we get all the time here at Chartr. The answer is that we use a lot of different tools â but one of our absolute favorites is [Flourish](. Part of the Canva family, [Flourish]( is the most powerful piece of data viz software weâve ever used. Take this fun 3 x 3 grid of area charts plotting different âpandemic trendsâ. In Excel, or other viz tools, this takes a lot of manual formatting, fiddling, dragging and editing. In [Flourish]( Itâs one click to turn the lines into a grid, one more click to choose the 3 x 3 style, and voilà â we have a stunning set of charts. If youâve ever wanted to take your data viz to the next level, the answer is [Flourish](. [To Make Charts Like Chartr, Try Flourish Today]( STEM sells Still, if students have their eyes trained on post-college life, STEM subjects like engineering and computer science continue to make sense. A [YouGov survey]( found that 61% of Americans believe a major in engineering leads to âabove average earningsâ, while just 19% felt the same way about studying foreign language â and that was the highest-rated humanities subject. Those generalizations are borne out in earnings data, at least per [2023 analysis]( from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which reveals that STEM disciplines dominate the post-college earnings tables. In fact, a typical graduate from any of the 9 different schools of engineering in the study can expect to earn over $100k a year by the mid-point of their career, with degrees in computer science, finance and pharmacy also good for breaking into the six-figure club. By comparison, students who majored in foreign languages, English language, philosophy, or history are typically taking home $65-70k by the midpoint of their career, with higher rates of unemployment. According to the data, 9.1% of grads who majored in philosophy and 7.8% who majored in foreign languages are unemployed, compared to an average of 4.6% for engineers. Fine arts graduates are most likely to be unemployed after leaving college, with a staggering 12.1% unemployment rate for students from that discipline. Oh, the humanities! As a data-driven newsletter, you might assume we would cheer the decline of the humanities, celebrating the rise of hard-nosed number-obsessed graduates. But, even we view the trend with more than a tinge of sadness â as our job is as much about finding human connections to relatable data-driven stories, a skill often honed through studying culture, as it is raw number-crunching in spreadsheets. The problem for would-be writers, linguists and historians is that â with college costs rising and incomes falling behind â the math just doesnât quite seem to be adding up. [Sponsored by Flourish]( The data viz tool the pros use We get asked how we make our charts all the time, one tool we love - which we used today - is [Flourish]( Part of the Canva family, Flourish is a data visualization tool that helps everyone tell better stories with data. Itâs used by creators and thousands of organizations worldwide to publish [interactive]( embeddable visualizations and stories that require no coding. Easily import your data, pick a template and publish it straight to your website or add it to a presentation. The best part? It's super intuitive, so anyone can get started. [Try Flourish today](. Like this Deep Dive? Let us know! [Read or share this story on the web]( *Sponsored by Flourish. Thanks for reading. See you tomorrow, when we return to our regular scheduled programming!
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