The Greatly Exaggerated Death of the English Major (and How To Save It)
Illustration by Hudson Christie / The New Yorker

The Greatly Exaggerated Death of the English Major (and How To Save It)

It's a story I feel like I've read before.

The?New Yorker's attention-grabbing headline?summarizes their long feature which explores the decade-long decline of English majors (and students majoring in humanities overall) at college campuses across the country. The data paints a bleak picture.

"During the past decade, the study of English and history at the collegiate level has fallen by a full third."

The article presents every theory that has been offered to explain this decline, from the rise of smartphones and addictive technology that makes us stupider, to concerns about AI taking over writing jobs, to the very real desire and pressure on students to pursue a degree that will supposedly lead to better job prospects.?

Yet still on the surface, professors and administrators alike are finding the trend hard to understand:

"English professors find the turn particularly?baffling?now: a moment when, by most appearances, the appetite for public contemplation?of language, identity, historiography, and other longtime concerns of the seminar table is at a peak."

Perhaps most worrisome is one professor's theory that "students [are] arriving at college with a sense that the unenlightened?past had nothing left to teach." The flow of funding is also a factor, as schools increasingly funnel dollars toward STEM majors and more "in-demand" industries such as cybersecurity.

The problem, as one student noted, is that those classes are often filled with "just people trying to learn something to get a job." I'm a former English?major myself, and have benefitted greatly from the way of thinking and skills I learned by doing that. So, yes, I would love to suggest a way to save the English major and other humanities majors too.

The solution won't come from higher education, though. It can only come from the rest of us who have the power and opportunity to celebrate those majors and hire the students who chose to do them.?

Employers say they want team members who think for themselves, are creative and understand how to communicate. You could easily argue that these are all strengths of humanities majors. If technology will ultimately help make our lives better, we will also need a new generation of leaders and teammates who understand ethics and carefully consider the implications of the innovations they unleash upon the world.

The world, in short, needs English and humanities majors. It's up to all of us to do the things that will prove that to the young people who are choosing their majors right now. Like demonstrating how studying those things can lead to fulfilling financially stable work that you love and a life worth leading. Otherwise the future will have much bigger problems than shrinking college English departments.

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Erin Webster Garrett

Ensuring access and opportunity for every student

2 年

Love this! We English and humanities majors - not just those in academia- can and should make a case for why those degrees provide good pathways to fulfilling careers and economic stability. But it will take all of us to make the case.

Christopher Mascis

Whole-Brand Marketing | Business Growth | Customer Experience | Stakeholder Value |

2 年

We need to use our observational, analytical and communications skills to see, understand and share *specifics* of how English majors make better businesses. Critical thinking skills, yes, but let's create specific examples of how humanities thinking *helps* engineering, and finance, computer science disciplines make better decisions, better products and better outcomes. We need to speak in the language, and to the goals, of the people we want to persuade. And who better to do that than English majors.... I know we're proud of our knowledge and skills. Let's make sure we're talking about how they make *everyone* better, not how we're better. It's not a zero-sum equation.

Andrea Driessen

Results-obsessed message strategist & copywriter for websites + sell sheets + lead magnets + scripts ◆ TED speaker ◆ business book author ◆ editor ◆ professional keynote speaker to business, fin-serve, & nonprofit groups

2 年
C.C. Chapman

Senior Professor of Practice - Business and Management

2 年

AMEN!!! As someone who has made the change to Higher Ed, I got a little worried at the start about what you were going to say but then was cheering at the end. Colleges do need to make changes too, but you are correct that if more people are hiring graduates with these skills, knowledge and majors it'll make it a whole lot easier for students and parents to embrace them too.

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