While health science majors and engineers face much better job prospects, and while in the present economy even those prospects aren’t terribly good, the post-graduation employment rate of English and other humanities majors is not that different from computer science or economics — degrees that are generally considered more marketable.
As of 2010-2011, the most recent year with available data, recent humanities and liberal arts majors had 9 percent unemployment. That’s right about on par with students in computer and math fields (9.1 percent), psychology and social work (8.8 percent), and the social sciences (10.3 percent). And it’s just a bit above the average across all majors of 7.9 percent. —Atlantic
Similar:
There are many Star Wars references in Dani Girl, so I made this tribute to Tom Jung's 197...
Culture
Take a moment to appreciate these good COVID-19 statistics
May 1, my state had the third-highest pe...
Awesome
Another delightful caricature by Rebecca Scassellati
Aesthetics
The Myth of the Megalith
I have found that archaeologists are sel...
Culture
APNews.com Photo Still Says Sam Smith "declared his pronouns 'they/them'" a Week Later
The Associated Press was widely criticiz...
Culture
The ChatGPT Lawyer Explains Himself
As Mike Edwards notes, "AI doomers will ...
Culture



