Languages, history, politics, social work, information studies, psychology, maths: humanities and social science is a very broad church, encompassing a wide range of courses.
But is it a solid career choice, or a holding pen for students who have no idea what career they want?
Traditional humanities include languages, history, English, archaeology and geography – not that dissimilar to some of the subjects you loved and hated in school. When it comes to social science, the clue is in the name: it’s a scientific approach to human life and culture, with subjects including psychology, politics, sociology and economics.
Some students will be surprised to find maths is in the mix too.
Some do indeed choose humanities because it’s a broad course that leads towards many different paths, but others may actually have a career in mind.
They might want, for instance, to study languages (which offer good employment prospects), or may want to be an archaeologist. Those taking economics and politics may also already have the outline of a career in mind, such as public policy or NGO work.
And psychology students generally have a clear idea of where they want to go.
Where to study humanities and social science
Every university in
Ireland
, and several institutes of technology, offers humanities and social science courses. Arts at UCD is still the most popular college course in Ireland, but its popularity waned in recent years as students flocked towards science degrees. The two-subject moderatorship at
Trinity College
requires students to pick their two subjects in advance.
NUI Galway
has a unique and creative suite of humanities courses, including arts with creative writing, arts with film studies, arts with performing arts studies, and arts with human rights.
Social science BA degrees at Maynooth University, UCD, Waterford IT, and UCC are generally more focused on social issues, with students exploring the world around them through subjects such as social policy, sociology, philosophy, politics, and economics; some graduates from these courses go on to careers in social work.
A more limited range of humanities courses are also available at most of the teacher-training colleges. St Patrick’s in Drumcondra, for example, has a joint honours humanities programme with DCU and Mater Dei.
Some smaller colleges may have particular strengths in certain areas, including the BA in psychology at Dublin Business School or English, media and cultural studies at Dún Laoghaire’s IADT.
Career opportunities
They’re still enormous. Employers do value the wide education of humanities graduates, particularly their ability to critically analyse a problem from multiple angles.
Teaching, journalism and the civil service are dominated by humanities graduates, while social science graduates often work in social work and the charity sector. Arts graduates with postgraduate business qualifications are also highly valued, particularly in marketing, sales, human resources, banking and finance. Culture and heritage organisations also have a high proportion of arts graduates.
Jobs are still hard to come by and are highly dependent on having a Government that supports investment in the arts; that said, the dire situation has improved somewhat over the last year.
Large multinationals such as Facebook, eBay and Google are crying out for graduates with language skills, particularly in sales or technical customer-service roles. Arts graduates with digital media skills are in high demand.
Because humanities is generally a broad qualification, career experts tell students in search of good, long-term career prospects that they’ll need to go on to a specialised postgraduate degree.
Salary expectations
Because an arts graduate might be a struggling musician or a top-level CAO, it’s difficult to indicate what sort of money they might make.
According to Payscale Human Capital, however, the average salaries for arts graduates range from € 18,313 to € 30,960 between one and four years after graduation and € 31,500-€ 52,000 between five and nine years after graduation.