By Margaux Ancel
With a current unemployment rate of 5.5 percent, an estimated 1.8 million people joining the work force with bachelors by the end of the 2016 school year, and the decreasing value of such degrees, students enrolled in small programs such as art history have reasons to be concerned about their chance to find a job.
The bachelor’s degree, offered interchangeably by the School of Fine Arts or Liberal Arts depending on the university, represents a small portion of the graduating students exploring the job market.
While being part of such a large number of college graduates looking for employment may hinder one’s ability to get a job easily, art history degrees bring students an edge to differentiate themselves from the rest of the crowd.
The University of Connecticut offers an art history bachelor’s degree through the school of Fine Arts. The program is relatively small and eight faculty members are currently teaching the classes on a rotating basis. However, the addition of a minor 10 years ago has boosted the number of students enrolling in the classes, according to art history professor Jean Givens.
As of fall 2014, 20 students enrolled in fine arts for art history, 17 of them chose the major as their primary degree full-time, one part-time and two were dual degrees. Overall, this group represents 3.63 percent of students enrolled in fine arts and 0.1 percent of the campus’ total enrollment.
Looking at the trends shown in data records from UConn, the number of students graduating with the degree has always been fairly low, ranging between 10 and 14 from 2004 to 2007. Since then, however, the numbers have slowly been declining, reaching a low of five in 2013.
These numbers are low in comparison to other programs offered at UConn. Between 2004 and 2013, the School of Fine Arts conferred 1,228 degrees, unlike the 23,681 for the College of Liberal Arts and 5,932 for the School of Business. According to Givens, however, the art history program is not so different from other liberal arts programs.
So how can such a small program give students a valuable edge in their job search and, more importantly, what is the value of an art history degree?
Several current UConn students and alumni provide the answer to this question through their personal experiences.
The small size of the program may actually be part of its value, says Mallory O’Donoghue, a recent graduate student from UConn’s art history program. “Art history is a program that is so unique and specialized, that its size is actually an asset,” O’Donoghue said.
Emma Romano, another 2015 UConn graduate now pursuing an M.F.A. degree in arts administration at UConn, had a similar opinion. “The small size serves as one of the best attributes of this program,” Romano said. “Since there were only a handful of art history students, I was able to forge deeper, close connections with my professors, many of whom I still stay in touch with, and had the chance to pursue many opportunities in the university art museums.”
Brendan Smalec, a senior at UConn studying molecular and cell biology and art history, expressed one of the many problems facing the art history degree at UConn. “A lot of people don’t even know that we have an art history department,” he said.
And he is not wrong.
With this mindset, the art history program can be seen as a discreet department full of potential the liberal arts community. Cast away to the fine arts department back in 2002, the field became isolated from its humanities counterparts and joined the art world in the secluded Fine Arts building in south side of campus, only to thrive briefly between 2002 and 2008 by reaching new highs in the number of students enrolled in the program.
Before 2002, art history was part of the College of Liberal Arts, allowing students to easily double major without the added credit requirements. Currently, students must now earn an additional 30 credits, or two extra semesters, to complete a secondary major outside of the School of Fine Arts.
The separation of art history from liberal arts is a positive thing, according to Givens, since the program already combines multiple areas of humanities and promotes pairing with other areas of interests through minors.
The additional coursework may deter some students from enrolling in the program, especially considering the curriculum similarity to liberal arts. “Eliminating the extra credits requirement for people who are already inCLAS would probably attract more students,” Smalec said.
However, most students believed the program had more value in the School of Fine Arts. “Art history is part of the body that makes up fine arts,” O’Donoghue said. “It is the philosophical and mental part of fine arts, they need each other to work and art history needs to be physically close to actual art to allow for real application of what we learn in the classroom.”
Smalec had a similar opinion, having completed multiple ECE courses accredited by UConn, he was already ahead of the program by the time he started his undergraduate career. The additional credits allowed him to graduate in four years.
“I do like being part of the School of Fine Arts, though, because it allows us to learn alongside studio majors, and I think that maintaining this relationship is really important,” Smalec said. “Since I don’t create art myself, outside of the two required studio classes, and staying close with those who actively do is critical for historical analysis.”
The program offered at UConn seems to be working more efficiently in its current setting, although several professors cite issues with funding when it comes to fine arts. Earlier this year, the university budget cuts affected the department first-hand by eliminating the funds allocated to scholarships and awards granted to students during the year for outstanding accomplishments and research.
Last year, the art history master’s degree was terminated due to a lack of sufficient support.
According to O’Donoghue, the department often suffers from low funding and budget cuts. “Even looking at the building, you can tell where the money is going, and fine arts are not a priority at the university,” she said. “It’s not just UConn, though, fine arts nationally are no longer a priority for education funding.”
With insufficient funding and support, the value of the degree in the eyes of the university and the general is questionable and quite honestly underrated. Art history’s fluid relation to both fine arts and humanities gives it an edge. According to a Bloomberg View article, the solution to high levels of unemployment in college graduates does not lie in enrolling in more science and business-based subjects, but rather to consider the economic value of the major. Higher earnings majors do not guarantee job security, diversity and a well-rounded education, however, does.
“The most valuable skill anyone can learn in college is how to learn efficiently — how to figure out what you don’t know and build on what you do know to adapt to new situations and new problems,” Virginia Postrel wrote in the article.
Givens talked about the prospects of being an arts and liberal arts undergraduate student coming out of the university entail a need for further studies, regardless of the major.
The art history degree should thus be evaluated in two distinct terms, its economic value and its unemployment rate. One is a matter of financial safety, while the other is a question of adaptability.