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Last Update: Sunday, Jul 13, 2025 17:06 [IST]
For decades, Indian students have been conditioned to
believe that success lies at the end of a narrow academic tunnel—one that
begins with Science in school and ends with Engineering or Medicine. While this
formula has served past generations, the future demands something far broader,
more nuanced, and reflective of the real world: a shift towards the Humanities,
Social Sciences, and Commerce.
Today, the world is no longer divided into rigid silos of
Science versus Arts. The real problems we face—climate change, mental health
crises, digital ethics, social inequality—require interdisciplinary thinking.
These are challenges not of biology or physics alone, but of understanding
human behaviour, governance, ethics, culture, policy, and economics. And that’s
exactly where the Humanities and Social Sciences step in.
The stigma attached to non-science subjects is not just
outdated—it is damaging. In reality, Humanities and Commerce offer an abundance
of career opportunities. From behavioural economics and journalism to
environmental policy, international relations, public administration, legal
studies, development research, urban planning, psychology, content strategy,
and design thinking—the scope is expanding exponentially. The digital revolution
has only amplified the need for liberal arts graduates who can think
critically, communicate effectively, and understand complex social systems.
Moreover, India's knowledge economy cannot afford to
produce only engineers and doctors. We need anthropologists who can help with
tribal inclusion, economists who can model rural development, political
scientists who can shape foreign policy, and educators who can rethink our
broken schooling system. The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 rightly encourages
multidisciplinary learning—but its success depends on societal willingness to
move away from career tunnel vision.
Parents and students must understand that Humanities and
Commerce are not fallback options; they are frontiers in themselves. They shape
leaders, thinkers, and changemakers. The corporate sector too is increasingly
valuing liberal arts graduates for roles in human resources, communications,
corporate social responsibility, and ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance)
compliance. Think tanks, international organizations, civil services,
non-profits, and even tech firms need social scientists to make sense of data
through the lens of society.
The time has come to break the myth that only Science
guarantees prestige or prosperity. True progress lies in embracing diverse
disciplines, valuing empathy as much as equations, and ideas as much as
inventions.
Today, students must be empowered to choose not just what
is "safe," but what is relevant. The Humanities and Social Sciences
are no longer the road less taken—they are the road ahead.