Employers
We take pride in helping our students connect to professional development opportunities, internships, and careers.
If you have any questions, please contact our recruiting team at 512.471.7900 or recruit@austin.utexas.edu.
Getting Started
Your Source for Top Talent
In addition to technical skills, Liberal Arts students develop and practice these human skills during their time at UT through coursework, experiential learning, and extracurricular activities. Our employer partners value these adaptive skills, not replicable by modern technology, making Liberal Arts students competitive in the ever-changing workforce.
Liberal Arts Majors are:
- Critical thinkers - using evidence-based analysis to formulate innovative solutions to business and social issues.
- Systems thinkers - identifying the connections between components of a larger system to expand the range of information used when solving complex problems.
- Emotionally intelligent - developing and honing their empathy, active listening, ability to manage stress, ability to manage people and openness to feedback and change.
- Adept learners - broadening their innate proficiency in learning new skills and knowledge to keep up with ever-changing needs in the marketplace and workforce.
- Socially aware - observing and understanding individuals and groups to better appreciate how they process information, how they make decisions, what motivates them, what they want, and how cultural or societal norms affect the way they perceive the world.
- Innovative - seeking new options, developing entrepreneurial ideas, formulating new concepts and creating and appreciating artistic works in order to hone their creative talents and outside-the-box thinking.
- Communicators - honing their writing, presentation, persuasion, speech and debate skills.
- Content managers - creating digital content and curating content to connect and integrate data from various sources.
- Cross-culturally competent - being proficient in a second, and often third, language providing increased mobility in the international job market and developing an appreciation of foreign languages and cultures.
- Ethically trained - learning theories and concepts of ethics and moral propositions to address conflicts and to determine individual direction.
- Technologically proficient - using information technology and appreciating how technology is used by consumers from mechanical and societal perspectives.
The Human Skills Matrix represents s
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Photo Credit.
The Human Skills Matrix is sourced from the MIT Jameel World Education Lab. Image adapted by Liberal Arts Career Services.
The Value of a Liberal Arts Degree
The Human Skills Matrix on the right was developed by the Jameel World Education Lab at MIT. This resource "quantifies the critical skills and attributes that individuals will need in the rapidly changing workplace of the future." We believe that Liberal Arts students develop and practice these skills and more during their time at UT through coursework, experiential learning, and extracurricular activities.
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