The Education of Historians for Twenty-first Century

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An examination and analysis of history education in American colleges and universities In 1958, the American Historical Association began a study to determine the status and condition of history education in U.S. colleges and universities. Published in 1962 and addressing such issues as the supply and demand for teachers, student recruitment, and training for advanced degrees, that report set a lasting benchmark against which to judge the study of history thereafter. Now, more than forty years later, the AHA has commissioned a new report. The Education of Historians for the Twenty-first Century documents this important new study's remarkable conclusions.   Both the American academy and the study of history have been dramatically transformed since the original study, but doctoral programs in history have barely changed. This report from the AHA explains why and offers concrete, practical recommendations for improving the state of graduate education. The Education of Historians for the Twenty-first Century stands as the first investigation of graduate training for historians in more than four decades and the best available study of doctoral education in any major academic discipline. Prepared for the AHA by the Committee on Graduate Education, the report represents the combined efforts of a cross-section of the entire historical profession. It draws upon a detailed review of the existing studies and data on graduate education and builds upon this foundation with an exhaustive survey of history doctoral programs. This included actual visits to history departments across the country and consultations with scores of individual historians, graduate students, deans, academic and non-academic employers of historians, as well as other stakeholders in graduate education. As the ethnic and gender composition of both graduate students and faculty has changed, methodologies have been refined and the domains of historical inquiry expanded. By addressing these revolutionary intellectual and demographic changes in the historical profession, The Education of Historians for the Twenty-first Century breaks important new ground. Combining a detailed historical snapshot of the profession with a rigorous analysis of these intellectual changes, this volume is ideally positioned as the definitive guide to strategic planning for history departments. It includes practical recommendations for handling institutional challenges as well as advice for everyone involved in the advanced training of historians, from department chairs to their students, and from university administrators to the AHA itself. Although focused on history, there are lessons here for any department. The Education of Historians for the Twenty-first Century is a model for in-depth analysis of doctoral education, with recommendations and analyses that have implications for the entire academy. This volume is required reading for historians, graduate students, university administrators, or anyone interested in the future of higher education.

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April 26,2025
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This book came out just a couple of years before I began work at the Ph.D. level in history, and most of its concerns seem to match my own experience, although it seems to me that by 2006, there was more deliberate training with electronic research sources and pedagogical tools than at the time the survey was taken (1999-2000) that led to this report. I hope that, now almost a generation later, the academic history profession has taken more of it concerns, especially regarding the job market and training of historians for non-traditional positions, to heart. The book is written by a committee, and at times it was interesting to guess which committee members had influenced this or that section, or to recognize a citation from a particularly prominent member, but the overall tone is decidedly impersonal and distant.

Among the major problems identified by this study was the fact that a boom in graduate studies in the mid-twentieth century had not led to an expansion of tenure track positions, nor a new understanding of professional opportunities for history Ph.D.’s outside of the academy, that history remains slow to pick up new teaching techniques, that the emphasis in most programs is on pure research, even though most existing positions split that with teaching, or even place teaching as the more important duty, and that history programs fail to keep pace with new technologies such as online database research. Graduate professors perpetuate this through a kind of snobbishness that suggests that successful historians by definition work at research Universities, preferably instructing new Ph.D.’s for a market that doesn’t need them. Students accrue massive debts or work for minimal compensation as TA’s and only the very few are lucky enough to “succeed” by the definition of their advisors. Meanwhile, the emphasis on STEM at the undergrad level means that history programs are cut or limited, so even fewer professors are hired.

Based on the survey, given to heads of Graduate Studies departments, it seems that this situation was not being addressed effectively at this time, and that both students and professors under-rated the seriousness of the situation. It was surprising how often it seemed to me that respondents re-affirmed the very beliefs that got them into the situation, or expressed a bizarre optimism that “their” grad students were fine, the problem was “out there” somewhere. The apparent lack of interest in attrition rates and exit interviews are only two examples. More surprisingly, from a current point of view, was that fully 82% of the respondents to the survey did not or could not answer the question about the prevalence of sexual harassment within their department, and that the majority-female committee allowed this fact to pass unmentioned in the narrative section.

Interestingly, reading the book gave me pangs of nostalgia, even acknowledging that my own graduate experience in history was mixed at best. Researching history truly is a joyful process, and should be celebrated and taught joyfully, but the history field needs to address its shortcomings if this is to continue to be a viable option for students with a passion for this work.
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