I recently borrowed abook from alocal library for myfour-year-old son; itwas called STEM Detectives: The Case ofthe Locked Library. Funny, Ithought, this sounds suspiciously like ahigher education publication. Imagine mysurprise when Idiscovered that the book, published in2020 and aimed atkids atKey Stage1, really was inthe business ofpromoting the familiar STEM agenda, showing how agroup ofchild detectives use their knowledge ofscience, technology, engineering and mathematics tosolve acrime.
STEM subjects are unquestionably important, and given the inequalities ofaccess tothem, sparking childrens interest iscritical. But itmade mewonder: where are the arts and humanities mini-investigators? Orthe super-small sleuths ofsocial science? What messages are being sent tochildren about those subject areas?
Typically, the message is that they offer nodirect routes into jobs and that those who study them do it mostly for love. Those of us teaching in arts, humanities and social sciences know, of course, that in addition to subject-specific knowledge, students learn a lot about the world from reading literature, history, anthropology and the like. The study of culture and society inevitably provokes the most difficult political, critical and philosophical questions.
It seems clear, however, that non-STEMers are losing ground, both with the public, many of whom seem to consider the cost of higher education to be merited only in the case of subjects promising financial reward, and with many ministers, who see the future revolving around big science and tech. In2020, for example, the education secretary, Gavin Williamson at the time, , while current prime minister Rishi Sunak earlier this year suggested that .
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A typical riposte is to point out that that . And the British Academys relatively new SHAPE initiative promoting arts, humanities and social science for people and the economy/environment is a laudable attempt to push back against the idea that only STEM can address societys challenges. But Iwant to suggest a way in which expertise from SHAPE subject areas might be deployed more strategically, engaging more directly with the world and, crucially, giving students the skills they need for the workplace.
At the University of Sussex, an institution known since the 1960s for its alternative thinking, weve launched a new kind of liberal artsBA that is doing exactly those things. Unlike the American liberal arts model adopted by a number of UK universities, which offers students access to a wide spread of subjects, our course, introduced in 2021-22, uses an interdisciplinary, even post-disciplinary, approach to study the fundamental challenges faced by society.
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Core global humanities modules directly address big and complex issues uncontainable in a single discipline, bringing together colleagues from across the arts and social sciences to offer multiple perspectives on climate change, globalisation, automation, culture wars, inequality, populism and migration. A parallel set of core modules teaches students complementary practice-based skills, via projects including video-making, critical art practice, acoustic ecology, psychogeography, interventions in museums, citizens assemblies, thinktank policy-making and strategic communications campaigns almost always in partnership with our multi-sector advisory board. The final year is a supported but independent project in the community.
The traditional American liberal arts model is coming under fire in the US itself. Responding to the perceived unworldliness of the arts, Costas Spirou, vice-president of Georgia College and State University wrote in these pages in 2022 that higher education must go beyond the strategy of defending the power and value of a liberal arts education, calling on colleges to connect disciplines more productively and to recognise the need for career preparation.
But it isnt just the US that needs to get serious about fitting humanities and social science students for life after. In some cases, of course, the traditionally siloed ivory-tower approach delivers impressive worldly returns. Boris Johnson, for example, landed quite a big job armed with his University of Oxford Classics degree. But, actually, isnt this the problem? The cultural capital of a humanities degree from a historic or prestigious university is still sufficiently fungible, even in todays volatile job market, not to require it to change. And given the aspiration of the rest of the sector towards the gold standard set by such institutions, the kind of pedagogic revolution we have undertaken is slow to catchon.
But catch on it must. Our interdisciplinary, challenge-focused pedagogy stretches our students intellectually and experientially, allowing them to realise so much more of their potential than if they were locked into one or two specialisms. In the process, they rack up impressive lines for their CVs and enter the workplace with a wealth of ideas, skills and relevant knowledge.
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We dont have to throw the baby out with the bathwater. Disciplinary research will always underpin post-disciplinary teaching, and we can teach students to be critical as well as market-ready. But the biggest challenges that humankind faces will be solved by people and teams who can not only analyse and calculate, but also conceptualise, persuade and create. If we can prepare those people and teams, we will have a compelling argument that studying the arts, humanities and social sciences has never been more important.
is a reader in American literature and visual culture at the University of Sussex.
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