To excel in the automated world Canada shouldn’t forget the liberal arts: study
OTTAWA — Canada can better prepare for a technologically disrupted future by producing more liberal-arts graduates, says a new report by the Royal Bank of Canada.
The bank’s study found that as more workplaces go deeper into automated labour there will be a growing need for people who have well-honed human skills in areas such as critical thinking, communications, active listening and curiosity.
These skills, it said, are often cultivated by liberal-arts programs, which could include disciplines like philosophy, geography and English literature. The study collected input from more than 5,000 employers, youths, workers and educators from across Canada.
“It’s fascinating how right across the board, including at tech companies, there’s this growing demand for these — some people call them soft skills we like to call them human skills,” said John Stackhouse, a senior vice-president at RBC and former Globe and Mail newspaper editor who holds a business degree.


