Is studying history outdated? Quite the opposite!

Project Access
Project Access
Published in
2 min readSep 19, 2020

Personally, I chose to study history because of nothing but my interest in the subject. If I wanted to complete a university degree, I would do it by studying something that I thoroughly enjoyed and use the general research skills that it gave me to focus on something different for my graduate studies. That is the thing about studying history in the UK: it opens more doors than you would believe for both Master’s available to you and jobs. Alumni from my university’s history department have gone on to become lawyers and politicians to finance banking, project managers or the UN.

At UCL, my professors and my peers have made me thrive. Since year 1, I have been able to choose almost all of my modules freely, and with UCL being renowned for its international outlook, I have studied everything from Middle Eastern to Chinese and Latin American history. While the department offers modules in European history, it is never completely Eurocentric material being taught, but rather wants us to understand history as it may be perceived by different cultures around the world. In light of Black Lives Matter rooting itself in the UK this spring, a movement was pushed forward to decolonize school curriculums, and I am proud to say that in UCL’s history department — though there are still improvements to be made — that studying racial and sexual minority history has been a tradition for years.

My professors have all travelled the world for their studies and they are some of the most compelling characters I have met in a long time. When you put that together with a student body within our course being divided across multiple nationalities from Asia, Europe and the Americas, our seminars never get boring. It is amazing h0w different we analyze current and past societies depending on what experiences and cultural norms we ourselves grew up with in our individual political systems, and I would not want to be without these discussions for the world. They engage you intellectually in a way I could have never dreamed of if I would have stayed in Denmark for my studies.

Originally published at https://projectaccess.org on July 26, 2020.

--

--

Project Access
Project Access

Project Access is a startup nonprofit powered by over 3,000 volunteers. Read personal & informative experiences to guide you to top universities on our Medium.