American Academy of Arts & Sciences Tracks the Status of Humanities Degrees at HBCUs

Education

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A new report from the Humanities Indicators project at the American Academy of Arts & Sciences has examined trends in humanities degree completion at historically Black colleges and universities over the past 25 years. In 2022, HBCUs awarded 2,907 bachelor’s degrees in humanities fields. This was a 15 percent decrease from the recent high of 3,434 degrees awarded in 2014. Notably, this is a significantly greater decrease than the 2.5 percent decline in all degrees awarded by HBCUs over the same time period. Most of the humanities degrees awarded by HBCUs in 2022 were within the “liberal studies” discipline, with concentrations in African American studies, cultural studies, or prelaw. The number of liberal studies/general humanities bachelor’s degrees earned at HBCUs more than tripled from 347 in 1997 to 1,136 in 2022. The amount of communications degrees awarded by HBCUs also grew, rising from 454 in 1997 to 947 in 2022. Conversely, nearly every other humanities discipline experienced declines in the number of degrees completed at HBCUs, with the sharpest drops found in English language and literature and history. In 1997, humanities degrees represented 14.3 percent of all degrees awarded at non-HBCUS and 8.1 percent of all degrees awarded at HBCUs....

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