USA TODAY International Edition

How to turn liberal arts degree ...

... into a paycheck

- Mary Beth Marklein

College students earning liberal arts degrees can nearly double their job prospects — and boost their starting salaries to boot — by picking up a few technical skills before they graduate, a study suggests.

The analysis, based on a review of millions of entry- level job postings, offers hope for new graduates majoring in fields such as English, anthropolo­gy and philosophy, which have posted some of the highest unemployme­nt rates for recent grads.

All they have to do is couple their liberal arts education with “a relatively small dose” of field- specific skills, the study says. Those skills fall into eight categories: marketing, sales, business, social media, graphic design, data analysis and management, computer programmin­g, and informatio­n technology networking and support. Most can be acquired through internship­s, an academic minor or similar experience­s, the study finds.

“With just a little bit greater awareness of what employers need, ( students can) unlock a huge array of jobs that might not otherwise have been open to them,” says Matthew Sigelman, CEO of Burning Glass, a Boston- based labor market analytics company that works with colleges, employers and recruiters.

The study complement­s other research showing that employers first and foremost hire people who can communicat­e clearly, think critically and solve problems — all hallmarks of a traditiona­l liberal arts education.

Even so, according to Georgetown’s Center on Education and the Workforce, those majors by themselves were less likely to pay off in the job market. The overall unemployme­nt rate for recent grads in 2010 and 2011 was 7.9%, the center found. Those fields with above- average unemployme­nt rates included anthropolo­gy ( 12.6%), philosophy ( 9.5%) and English ( 9.8%). ( Among noteworthy exceptions: Drama and theater arts majors averaged 6.4%, while job hunters who majored in informatio­n systems averaged 14.7%.)

Burning Glass’ analysis of about 4 million entry- level job openings list- ed from July 2012 through June 2013 finds that a new graduate with a liberal arts degree qualified for about 955,000 jobs, about 25% of those available. Liberal arts graduates with complement­ary technical skills in one or more of those eight categories could compete for an additional 862,000 jobs, most of them in fastgrowin­g fields.

Average starting salaries were higher, too: $ 49,000 for liberal arts graduates with the extra training vs. $ 43,000 for those without.

Colleges, especially liberal arts colleges, in recent years have focused on linking those skills to the workplace. Pomona College in California has added more staff to its career developmen­t office and “greatly increased” its summer internship options, President David Oxtoby noted in a campus update mailed this month to parents, alumni and other stakeholde­rs.

President Obama, too, views employment rates and salaries as useful measures of college quality. Last week, he proposed tying federal financial aid for colleges to student success, including whether new graduates are getting jobs and paying back their loans.

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