Harvard's Undergraduate Concentration Distribution

Continuing on the thought that the study of World Canonical Texts may be best encompassed in a field like World Humanities or World Area Studies, academically it needs to be represented in a University's curriculum as either course(s), undergraduate minor or major, and Ph.D. programs. For this reason, I started to look at Harvard's undergraduate program - they call major "field of concentration," and minor "secondary field."

 

In Harvard College's (that is their undergraduate school) Student Handbook online, they show how many concentrators there are. I pick the last year where data is available (2012) to compile the following table:

 

# Field No. of Concentrators No. of Concentrators + other fields Total
1 Economics 568 NA 568
2 Government 438 8 446
3 Social Studies 300 11 311
4 Psychology 275 0 275
5 Sociology 141 7 148
6 Anthropology 67 7 74
7 Women, Gender, Sexuality 15 2 17
* Social Sciences 1,804 35 1,839
8 History 156 8 164
9 History and Literature 140 11 151
10 History and Science 121 5 126
11 Philosophy 45 7 52
12 Literature 39 2 41
13 Linguistics 22 4 26
14 Religion 20 2 22
15 Folklore and Mythology 12 0 12
 * Humanities 555  39 594
16 English 159 9 168
17 East Asian Studies 46 3 49
18 Romance Languages and Literatures 46 2 48
19 Classics 39 1 40
20 African and African American Studies 15 6 21
21 Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations 21 0 21
22 South Asian Studies 5 2 7
23 Slavic Languages and Literatures 5 0 5
24 Germanic Languages and Literatures 4 0 4
 * Area-based Humanities 340 23 363
25 History of Art and Architecture 69 1 70
26 Visual and Environmental Studies 59 0 59
27 Music 10 5 15
 * Arts 138 6 144
28 Neurobiology 228 0 228
29 Human Evolutionary Biology 156 0 156
30 Human Developmental & Regenerative Biology 146 0 146
31 Organismic & Evolutionary Biology 119 NA 119
32 Chemistry 92 2 94
33 Physics 52 38 90
34 Math 74 16 90
35 Statistics 85 4 89
36 Molecular & Cellular Biology 79 0 79
37 Chemical & Physical Biology 63 0 63
38 Environmenta Science & Public Policy 38 4 42
39 Chemistry & Physics 39 1 40
40 Earth & Planetary Sciences 16 3 19
41 Astrophysics 7 10 17
 * Science 1194 78 1272
42 Applied Math 226 0 226
43 Computer Science 198 17 215
44 Engineering Sciences 147 6 153
45 Biomedical Engineering 48 1 49
46 Mechanical Engineering 18 0 18
47 Electrical Engineering 16 0 16
Engineering 653 24 677
48 Special Concentrations 13 0 13
  Grand Total 4697 205 4902

* The groupings here are my own, not Harvard's official classifications. In fact, Harvard puts History as Social Science.

 

There should be no double-counting here - and data is as of Dec, 2012. Students I think declare concentrations by then in the beginning of the Sophomore year. So we are talking about roughly 3 classes (Sophomore, Junior, Senior) each class with roughly 1,600~1,650 students.

 

Also note that the "concentrators + other fields" means joint concentrations, which is not double-major and also not "secondary fields.

 

This is more data-entry than I originally thought, but it highlights the prominence of Social Science (like Economics and Government) in the mix (which is conducive to doing a secondary field in something like "World Humanities"). Also, for students concentrating on History, or History of Art & Architecture, "World Humanities" would also likely to be a good secondary field.

 

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