To be honest, I thought your initial essay was needlessly inflammatory, and I thought the instructor's first reply was pretty reasonable. But then the instructor's follow-up post... yikes.
you're learning valuable skills that will benefit you in the work world, no matter what your career is. Skills like communication, critical thinking, analysis, and in some ways even more important, compassion, cultural understanding and empathy.
Sounds like someone trying hard to justify their job.
Engineering and science disciplines provide
critical thinking and
analysis skills to a much higher (and objectively useful) degree, and the coursework really just sets the stage for real-world problem solving.
Communication skills are also not something you learn in a classroom, especially when being taught by an instructor like this whose career sounds like it consists of collecting some humanities degrees and working odd jobs. "Critical thinking" assignments in humanities courses are generally a joke, and they do not prepare you to be an effective professional communicator.
Compassion and
empathy are easy to develop If you're not a psychopath, and you'd better have developed these skills waaayyy before college or you are probably already a lost cause. Nobody should be counting on a college humanities course as the tipping point that determines whether someone can develop compassion and empathy. I won't comment on
cultural understanding because I think that's just a byproduct of compassion and empathy.
Unfortunately, a lot of humanities people end up trained to believe that empathy and compassion and other soft skills are a substitute for critical thinking and analytical methods. Then, they latch on to a poorly-thought out idea and substitute the evidence and data (you know, the key ingredients to *real* critical thinking) with moral posturing, appeals to emotion, etc. And when you spent four years (or let's be realistic, 4-5 years) and $100k+ on a humanities degree you have to justify it somehow, so you become convinced that your arguments simply cannot be grasped without specialized humanities training. In fact, the next quote is a perfect example of that:
One friend related to me how co-workers are "consistently told they need to work on their soft skills (see: people skills, empathy, compassion, critical thinking, and communication) if they want to be promoted into leadership roles." This person related how they are seen by their managers as impressively well rounded with regards to those skills and they attribute this to their humanities courses and music minor.
This is a perfect example of humanities-style "critical thinking" failing in action. First of all, this story sounds completely made up. But assuming it's actually true: I guess the argument here is that humanities provides special skills that can unlock professional success? And the implication is that people who lack humanities training are less likely to get promoted and succeed professionally? It's a very bold hypothesis, supported by one flimsy piece of (made up...) anecdotal evidence, and if it were true that would be a groundbreaking finding. But of course, these soft skills can't be quantified, can't really be studied, and so we have to trust the story about this one guy with his music degree that got a promotion while his coworkers floundered in their careers because they didn't take a humanities course that would have taught them people skills!! Does anyone really believe that humanities coursework, music minors, and stuff like that correlates with promotions, earnings, etc? It's a ridiculous argument on its face, but when the facts are against you the only way to argue is to make the bold claims like and hope nobody spends the time to refute you. I'm not saying that minoring in music or taking some humanities courses is a bad thing, but treating it like the key to success is absurd.
some of the most creative people I know, such as performers, dancers, and cosplayers, who all have tech day jobs
So did they land those tech jobs because they learned tech skills, or because they developed empathy and compassion during their humanities courses in college? Would an engineering degree prevent these people from using their spare time to pursue their hobbies?
liberal arts graduates are the best problem solvers.
That's... not true, by pretty much any metric. Unless your problem has nothing to do with math, science, engineering, medicine, business, finance, etc.
I use my writing and communication skills all the time to propose projects, obtain funding, and make presentations to the sales force and customers."
More vague claims. This time, the implication is that humanities coursework will just... make you a better writer and communicator. Or in other words, people without humanities training have inferior writing and communication skills and therefore are less likely to successfully obtain funding and complete projects? How, specifically, does a humanities degree help you accomplish any of this? It doesn't matter - just trust that you need these humanities courses because without them you'll once again fail to achieve professional success! In reality: if you're naturally good at presentations and sales then you'll probably have success regardless of your degree, and overall your career will probably benefit more if that degree is technical in nature.
There's always going to be that humanities major who points out that *they* were successful and *they* are in charge of a team of engineers and *they* couldn't have gotten there without their religious studies degree because it made them a super writer. And there's always going to be the antisocial programmer who should be kept behind closed doors away from other people. I'm not saying that anyone with science coursework is automatically a better thinker and problem-solver than someone who majored in humanities, but if you randomly picked a thousand engineering majors and a thousand humanities majors and told both groups they needed to coordinate to write a project proposal, obtain funding, and make a presentation to a sales force, we all know the smart money is on the engineers. Unfortunately that's an emotionless statistical argument, not an anecdote, so it might not make sense to the humanities major.