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Linguist is as linguist does: A comparative study...
Journal article

Linguist is as linguist does: A comparative study on the employment and income of graduates from linguistics programs in Canada

Abstract

Abstract: This study attempts to answer a perennial question asked of and by every student of linguistics: ‘What can you do with this degree?’. We address the question through an in-depth analysis of administrative and tax data from Statistics Canada (2009–2018). Specifically, this article (i) maps out educational and employment pathways of linguistics graduates in Canada, (ii) compares their earnings to graduates from other ‘competitor’ programs that future linguists consider as viable alternatives, and (iii) verifies the range of careers advertised by linguistics departments against the reality of the industries in which graduates from those departments are employed. These findings enable us to draw conclusions about the optimal and suboptimal educational and career pathways that involve a linguistics degree. Linguistics graduates tend to earn less than their peers in comparable programs, unless they pursue a lengthy educational path. The findings also point to a partial mismatch between potential careers advertised by Canadian linguistics departments and actual areas of employment after graduating with a linguistics degree. We provide suggestions for linguistics departments on how best to align the policies and practices of these programs with the ground truth of the labor market.

Authors

Battershill K; Kuperman V

Journal

Language, Vol. 99, No. 4, pp. e191–e209

Publisher

Johns Hopkins University Press

Publication Date

December 1, 2023

DOI

10.1353/lan.2023.a914199

ISSN

0097-8507

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