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Undergraduate students are turning away from the humanities, and some colleges are following suit by closing those programs. Between 2015 and 2024, the share of all bachelor’s degrees awarded in the humanities dropped from 10.9% to 8.5%, replaced by a larger share of STEM degrees. Different colleges shut down programs for different reasons. Some, like Syracuse University, are closing programs with low enrollment. In Ohio and Indiana, state law mandates public colleges shutter programs that graduate few students. Smaller schools, like Earlham College, change curriculum when their budgets are crunched.
Students have their own reasons for changing majors. They generally want their education to lead to jobs, especially with the college sticker price rising, and an uncertain job market ahead. But if Middle Eastern studies and fine arts are only offered by elite universities with large endowments, and only to students who can afford to study them, that would subvert the democratic purpose of higher education, Syracuse humanities chair Gregg Lambert said.
“These are programs that are being closed precisely at the moment that I think we need more,” he said. “I don’t see that these kinds of knowledge are going to be able to exist outside a university environment.”
Rosie Jacobson, who graduated from Earlham College in 2010 with a degree in sociology/anthropology that will now no longer exist, worries future students will miss out on a well-rounded college experience. “I feel deeply sad that other people might not be able to have that experience,” she said. “And that other young weirdos are not going to be challenged and invited into a legacy of thought the way that I was.” |