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Career Exploration

Five Skills for Historians

From the American Historical Association (See the AHA’s original post here):

“The Career Diversity Five Skills were first identified in focus groups of historians with PhDs who found careers beyond traditional academia—five things they hadn’t learned in grad school but that they found they needed in order to succeed beyond the academy. These five skills are also essential to succeeding as professors. They are:

  1. COMMUNICATION, in a variety of media and to a variety of audiences
  2. COLLABORATION, especially with people who might not share your worldview
  3. QUANTITATIVE LITERACY: a basic ability to understand and communicate information presented in quantitative form, i.e., understanding that numbers tell a story the same way words, images, and artifacts do
  4. INTELLECTUAL SELF-CONFIDENCE: the ability to work beyond subject matter expertise, to be nimble and imaginative in projects and plans
  5. DIGITAL LITERACY: a basic familiarity with digital tools and platforms.

This guide presents an introduction to each skill—adapted from posts originally published on AHA Today in Spring 2016—as well as a list of AHA-produced resources that can help develop an understanding of that skill. The resources include blog posts, Perspectives on History articles, video resources, and more.

Many thanks to our blog authors for their thoughts and to Lindsey Martin, Mellon career development officer at the University of Chicago, who compiled and annotated these resources.”

Click on each of the five skills for more information. 

From Loyola

The History Graduate Program at Loyola ran, with support from the AHA’s Career Diversity Initiative, a seminar series that featured dedicated meetings for four of the five skills listed above. Resources gathered during the digital literacy and intellectual self-confidence meeting can be accessed by Loyola students by following the links below:

IDPs & Career Exploration Resources

History graduate degrees prepare students for careers in a wide array of settings. Graduates of Loyola’s MA and PhD programs go on to careers in teaching, public history, museums, non-profit and cultural work, higher-ed administration and support, entrepreneurship, and more.

Exploring Careers While in Graduate School

History Dept.’s Professional Lives of Historians Course:

The pro-seminar course is required for all incoming history PhD students beginning fall 2019 and later. It can be taken as an elective by all other history graduate students. Students in this course will learn about the many career pathways open to historians with graduate degrees and begin to prepare for careers after graduation. Funded PhD students who started before fall 2019 are required to attend 8 pedagogy seminars by the time they begin teaching their own courses in year 4. See the Graduate section of the LUC History Department Website for more information about the Professional Lives of Historians Course.

Individual Development Plans:

All history graduate students at Loyola are required to build and maintain their own Individual Development Plans (IDPs), a planning tool designed to assist with graduate school and career planning. Each student is required to bring their IDP with them to their twice-yearly advising meetings with the graduate program director. We recommend using the assessments and IDP template at ImaginePhD for this.

Resources listed here: This website has dozens of links to resources at Loyola and beyond that will help you prepare for careers after graduation.

In addition to the resources on this site and on ImaginePhD, the following information will help you explore potential career paths.

Other Career Exploration Resources

Beyond Academe: Click here.

Beyond the Professoriate: Click here.

Career Contacts program from the American Historical Association

Career Diversity for Historians and Five Skills for Historians from the American Historical Association

Carpe Careers from Inside Higher Ed

Connected Academics from the MLA

“Exploring Career Pathways” from Catherine Maybrey: Click here.

“Exploring Your Skills” from Inside Higher Ed: Click here.

From PhD to Life: Click here.

Humanists at Work: Click here.

Next Generation PhD at Loyola Chicago

The Professor is In from Karen Kelsky, PhD

“Rethinking Humanities PhD” resources from the Council of Graduate Schools

Studies and reports about career pathways for humanists: click here.

“Transferable Skills and How to Talk About Them” by Stacy Hartman for Connected Academics

Where do humanists work?” from The Humanities PhD Project

Where Historians Work database from the American Historical Association

Versatile Humanists from Duke

From Tropics of Meta:
How One Tenure-Track Prof Left Academia: A Beginner’s Guide,” by Felicity Palmer
I have a PhD in History: How Can I Survive in the Private Sector?” by John Southard
Making Your Way as a History PhD in the Think Tank World” by Megan K. Doherty
Working for the Man?! Turning Your PhD into a Meaningful Job with the Federal Government” by Ryan Reft

“The Fantasy, The Ideal, and The Reality of Career Exploration”: Click here.

Imagine PhD: Career Exploration and Planning Tool

Imagine PhD: a career exploration and planning tool for the humanities and social sciences.