ACLS will spearhead a three-year initiative to
assess and reform humanities graduate education in partnership with
the American Historical Association, the Modern Language
Association, and the Society of Biblical Literature
NEW
YORK, Jan. 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The American
Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) has won the open competition
for a cooperative agreement with the National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH) Office of Challenge Programs to lead the "Graduate
Education in the Humanities: A National Convening" initiative. The
NEH will provide up to $500,000 in
funds to be matched by non-government third parties for a total of
$1 million for this project.
Our goal is improvement of graduate
education in the humanities and to promote its value in the
US.
ACLS and the NEH will undertake this ambitious effort at reform
of graduate education together with the American Historical
Association, the Modern Language Association, and the Society of
Biblical Literature. At a time when many graduate programs in the
humanities are experiencing cuts and reductions, this project aims
to bring concrete solutions straight to faculty and administrators
across the country. From 2025 to 2028, ACLS will engage
decision-makers in commitments to adopt the recommended reforms and
implement change.
The goal is system-wide improvement of the graduate education
experience in the humanities for all students, including first
generation college graduates and those from traditionally
underrepresented groups. ACLS and the NEH also seek to promote the
value of graduate education in the humanities to public audiences
across the United States.
"Our mantra is carpe diem, 'seize the day.' We seek to
transform a highly uncertain moment when humanities degree programs
and budgets are being cut and the value of humanistic knowledge is
being publicly attacked, into an opportunity for scholars to work
together to improve graduate programs across the country," said
ACLS President Joy Connolly.
"Together with the NEH, AHA, MLA, and SBL, we will tackle a range
of enormously challenging issues, from financial aid and
recruitment to degree requirements and professional outcomes. We
want brilliant, dedicated, creative people to feel that graduate
school in the humanities is the place for them, and that their work
will make a difference. We will build on successful reforms to
model programs of study that are rigorous and responsive to
students' needs. And with the formal national Convening in 2027, we
seek to make the strongest possible case for the benefits of
graduate education in the humanities to the American public."
Currently, graduate education in the
United States takes place in a competitive, hierarchical
landscape of institutions and organizations. With "Graduate
Education in the Humanities," ACLS will bring together stakeholders
that traditionally do not work together—nearly 100 professional
academic associations; administrators from the 45 institutions
producing the vast majority of humanities PhDs in America (the ACLS
Research University Consortium); more than 200 liberal arts,
community college, regional comprehensive institutions, and
research libraries (the ACLS Associate members); national
associations such as the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and
the Council of Graduate Schools; and thousands of scholars,
including students, tenured, tenure-track, and adjunct faculty, and
independent researchers, who have received ACLS fellowships and
grants, served as peer reviewers, and participated in ACLS programs
promoting new approaches to graduate curricula, the dissertation,
and PhD career pathways.
ACLS is uniquely positioned to work with the NEH on this
unprecedented project of national scope and scale. Each year, ACLS
administers the award and distribution of $25 million in fellowships and grants to scholars
at all career stages representing a broad variety of institutions.
As part of its mission to advance the creation and distribution of
knowledge in the humanities and social sciences, ACLS regularly
convenes its 81-member academic societies, administrators from
leading PhD programs, and students and scholars at the forefront of
21st century research in a broad range of established and emerging
fields. Programs like the Mellon/ACLS Public Fellows (2011-2020),
ACLS Leading Edge Fellowship (2020-present), and the Mellon/ACLS
Dissertation Innovation Fellowship demonstrate the ACLS commitment
to graduate education reform and to better prepare humanities PhDs
to use their knowledge and skills as a public good.
Learn more about ACLS resources that reflect innovative
approaches to humanities education, including reports and resource
pages on publicly engaged doctoral education; diverse PhD career
pathways; improving diversity, equity, and belonging, alternatives
to traditional forms of the dissertation; and innovations in
research training and methods.
Formed a century ago, the American Council of Learned
Societies (ACLS) is a nonprofit federation of 81 scholarly
organizations. As the leading representative of American
scholarship in the humanities and interpretive social sciences,
ACLS upholds the core principle that knowledge is a public good. In
supporting its member organizations, ACLS expands the forms,
content, and flow of scholarly knowledge, reflecting our commitment
to diversity of identity and experience. ACLS collaborates with
institutions, associations, and individuals to strengthen the
evolving infrastructure for scholarship.
Created in 1965 as an independent federal agency, the
National Endowment for the Humanities supports research and
learning in history, literature, philosophy, and other areas of the
humanities by funding selected, peer-reviewed proposals from around
the nation. Additional information about the National Endowment for
the Humanities and its grant programs is available
at www.neh.gov.
View original content to download
multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/american-council-of-learned-societies-to-commence-historic-collaboration-with-the-national-endowment-for-the-humanities-graduate-education-in-the-humanities-a-national-convening-302350746.html
SOURCE American Council of Learned Societies