II-60b: Humanities Degrees as a Share of All Master's and Professional Degrees Awarded, by OECD Member Country, 2018
* The horizontal axis of this graph does not extend to 100%, as this would make it difficult to compare nations. In no nation do humanities degrees constitute more than a small percentage of all degrees. Percentages include professional practice doctorates. See “About the Data” for the disciplines grouped by the data collector under the heading of “humanities.”
Source: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), OECD.Stat Extracts (online data analysis tool), . This information is gathered by the OECD from member countries on an annual basis via the “UOE” (UIS/OECD/EUROSTAT) data collection. Data analyzed and presented by the American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences’ Humanities Indicators ().
To arrive at meaningful comparisons among countries that have substantially different educational systems, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) uses the (ISCED), which was created by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in the early 1970s to facilitate efforts to aggregate and present international education statistics.
The disciplines UNESCO includes within the humanities are “religion and theology,” “foreign languages and cultures (living or ‘dead’ languages and their literatures, area studies),” “native languages (current or vernacular language and its literature),” and “other humanities (interpretation and translation, linguistics, comparative literature, history, archeology, philosophy, ethics).” (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization [UNESCO], “” [Montreal: UNESCO Institute for Statistics, 2012], 73).
Data were obtained by navigating to and selecting on the left sidebar menu “Education and Training” > “Education at a Glance” > “Students, access to education and participation” > “Graduates by Field.” Humanities Indicator staff further customized and then exported the data extract using the controls below the page title.