Overview
History is the disciplined study of past events, societies, and ideas—not to memorize dates, but to understand how the world came to be what it is and to develop the analytical skills to navigate its future. Historians learn to evaluate evidence, construct arguments from primary sources, and communicate complex narratives with clarity and precision.
The curriculum covers a broad range of periods and regions—from ancient civilizations to modern nation-states, from European history to Asian and Southeast Asian history. Students study political, social, economic, and intellectual history, learning to see events from multiple perspectives. Research methodology, archival work, and historiography (the study of how history itself is written) are core components.
History graduates are valued for their ability to research thoroughly, think critically, and write persuasively. The discipline is also excellent preparation for law school and graduate studies in international relations or public policy.
Among the world's leading history programmes, the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge stand apart for their tutorial system—weekly one-on-one sessions with a specialist that develop argumentation skills no lecture-based programme can match. Harvard's History department is the largest in the United States, spanning every region and period from ancient China to modern Africa, and offering unparalleled archival resources through the Widener Library. Yale's strength lies in diplomatic and intellectual history, while the Sorbonne (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) remains Europe's heart of historical scholarship, with deep expertise in the French Revolution, medieval Europe, and the history of ideas. Each institution shapes historians differently: Oxbridge through intensive close reading, Harvard through breadth and primary-source immersion, and the Sorbonne through rigorous engagement with historiographical traditions.
In Singapore
In Singapore, they pursue careers in government policy, journalism, heritage conservation, museum curation, and education.
Career Outcomes & Salary
What jobs can I get and how much will I earn?
$35,000–$55,000 (US) / £22,000–£32,000 (UK) / A$45,000–$60,000 (Australia)
$55,000–$100,000 (US) / £35,000–£65,000 (UK)
$80,000–$200,000+ (US, varies enormously by sector)
Steady but sector-dependent. Direct 'historian' roles are limited, but the analytical, research, and communication skills history develops are in demand across many industries. Law, civil service, consulting, and education are the most common destinations. The heritage and museum sector is growing slowly but is resource-constrained. Digital humanities skills significantly improve employability.
Industry Trends & Outlook
Where is this field heading?
History as a discipline is evolving rapidly, shaped by digital transformation, interdisciplinary approaches, and growing public engagement with the past. Digital humanities has become a major force—computational text analysis, GIS mapping of historical data, digitised archive access, and network analysis of historical relationships are creating new research possibilities. Projects like the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database, the Old Bailey Online, and digitised newspaper archives are making historical research accessible at a scale that was impossible a generation ago. History graduates with digital skills—data analysis, coding, database management—are increasingly valued in both academic and non-academic settings.
Public history and heritage are growing sectors. Museums, heritage sites, archives, and cultural organisations employ historians for curation, interpretation, education, and policy roles. The expansion of streaming platforms has created demand for historical consultants in film and television—shows like 'Chernobyl,' 'The Crown,' and 'Shogun' employ historians for accuracy and authenticity. Corporate history and organisational heritage work (commissioned histories, brand storytelling, anniversary projects) is a niche but steady market. Meanwhile, the growing importance of diversity, equity, and inclusion in institutions has created demand for historians who can research and contextualise institutional histories, particularly around race, gender, and colonialism.
AI is transforming historical research tools rather than replacing historians. Machine learning can transcribe handwritten documents, translate ancient texts, and identify patterns across millions of pages—tasks that once consumed years of a scholar's career. However, historical interpretation—understanding context, evaluating bias, constructing meaningful narratives about human experience—remains fundamentally human work. The graduates who thrive combine traditional historical skills (archival research, analytical writing, critical thinking) with digital competencies and the ability to communicate complex ideas to diverse audiences. History degrees remain among the most respected for developing transferable intellectual skills, which is why history graduates are well-represented in law, journalism, policy, consulting, education, and the civil service.
AI & This Major
AI is a tool for historians, not a replacement. Machine learning transcribes documents, analyses large text corpora, and identifies patterns at scale. But interpreting evidence, constructing arguments, understanding context, and communicating meaning are irreducibly human skills. History graduates who combine analytical writing with digital literacy are well-positioned for an AI-augmented workplace.
What You'll Learn
Core topics and skills covered in this degree
Is This Right For Me?
Honest self-assessment to help you decide
You'll thrive if...
- ✓You're genuinely curious about the past—not just facts and dates, but why things happened, how people experienced events, and what it means for today
- ✓You enjoy reading extensively and can sustain long hours of independent study with books, articles, and primary sources
- ✓You love constructing arguments in writing—history is fundamentally an argumentative discipline where you build interpretations from evidence
- ✓You're fascinated by how different perspectives and biases shape our understanding of events—historiography, not just history
- ✓You want a degree that develops powerful transferable skills: analytical thinking, research, persuasive writing, and the ability to handle complex, ambiguous information
Might not be for you if...
- ●You find extended reading and writing tedious—history students typically read 200–400 pages and write 2,000–5,000 words per week
- ●You want a degree with a clear, direct career path—history is versatile but requires you to actively build your career direction
- ●You prefer quantitative work with definitive right/wrong answers over interpretive analysis where multiple valid arguments exist
- ●You're mainly interested in memorising facts and dates—university history is about interpretation and argument, not recall
- ●You want immediate practical or vocational training—history is an intellectual education, not professional preparation
A Day in the Life
What a typical week actually looks like
A typical week in Year 2 might look like this: Monday starts with a European intellectual history lecture on the Enlightenment—you're tracing how Voltaire, Rousseau, and Kant redefined the relationship between reason, religion, and political authority, and debating whether the Enlightenment was a coherent movement or a loose collection of contradictory ideas. The lecturer challenges you with a question: did the Enlightenment cause the French Revolution, or did the Revolution create the myth of the Enlightenment? After lunch, you have a primary source seminar where you work through excerpts from Edmund Burke's 'Reflections on the Revolution in France' alongside Thomas Paine's 'Rights of Man,' analysing how two contemporaries interpreted the same events in diametrically opposite ways.
Tuesday brings an empire and colonialism seminar on the British Raj—you're reading Ranajit Guha's work on subaltern studies and questioning how traditional imperial histories centred the coloniser's perspective while marginalising Indian voices. Your small-group tutorial (six students and a tutor) involves presenting a 10-minute argument about whether the Indian Rebellion of 1857 should be called a 'mutiny,' a 'rebellion,' or a 'war of independence'—and defending your position against probing questions from your classmates. Wednesday is your research methods day: a historiography lecture exploring how the Annales school (Braudel, Febvre) revolutionised historical methodology by emphasising long-term social and economic structures over political events and great men, followed by an archival skills workshop where you learn to read 18th-century handwriting, navigate catalogue systems, and handle fragile documents in the university's special collections.
Thursday is dedicated to your chosen special subject—this term it's the Cold War in Asia. You're reading declassified CIA documents alongside Chinese Communist Party sources to piece together the decisions behind the Korean War's escalation, and your weekly essay (2,500 words, due Friday) asks whether the conflict was primarily a civil war, a superpower proxy war, or an ideological crusade. The tutor expects you to engage with at least four different scholarly interpretations, not just present 'what happened.' Friday is lighter: a global history lecture on the Atlantic slave trade, examining the economic, demographic, and cultural consequences across three continents, followed by free time most students spend in the library writing their essay, reading ahead for next week's seminars, or visiting the university archive for their dissertation research. Weekends involve substantial reading—history students typically read 200–400 pages per week—but there's a deep intellectual satisfaction in learning to see the present as the product of choices, accidents, and forces that history makes visible.
High School Preparation
What to study and do before university
Skills to Develop
- •Read primary sources beyond your school syllabus—letters, diaries, government documents, speeches—and practise analysing them for bias, audience, and historical context
- •Write analytical essays regularly: focus on constructing arguments supported by evidence rather than simply narrating events. A strong history student argues, not describes
- •Develop your research skills using academic databases (JSTOR, Google Scholar) and learn to find, evaluate, and cite scholarly sources properly
- •Read widely across different historical periods and geographies—don't just study what's on your school syllabus. Read books by historians like Eric Hobsbawm, Barbara Tuchman, or Yuval Noah Harari to develop historiographical awareness
Extracurriculars
- •Participate in history essay competitions—the Royal Historical Society essay prize, the Concord Review, or national history day competitions develop argumentative writing at a high level
- •Join a debate or Model UN club—the skills of constructing arguments, using evidence, and understanding different perspectives transfer directly to historical analysis
- •Visit museums, archives, and historical sites with a critical eye—don't just absorb facts, ask why exhibits are presented the way they are and whose stories are being told or omitted
- •Start a history blog, podcast, or YouTube channel covering a period or theme that interests you—communicating history to a public audience is a valuable skill
- •Conduct independent research on a local history topic using primary sources from your community—local archives, old newspapers, oral histories—this demonstrates genuine historical inquiry
QS World Ranking 2026
History
| # | University |
|---|---|
| 1 | 🇺🇸Harvard University |
| 2 | 🇬🇧University of Oxford |
| 3 | 🇬🇧University of Cambridge |
| 4 | 🇺🇸Yale University |
| 5 | 🇺🇸Stanford University |
How This Compares to Similar Majors
Side-by-side with related fields
Getting In — Admissions Guide
How competitive is this major and how to stand out
History is competitive at top universities due to high application volumes. Oxford and Cambridge typically require A*AA at A-Level with History, and conduct rigorous interviews with unseen primary source analysis. At US universities, history is less competitive for admission (no pre-requisites) but highly competitive at elite institutions (Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford). UCL, Edinburgh, and King's College London are also strong UK options with AAA–AAB requirements. IB students typically need 38+ for top programmes.
What Strengthens Your Application
- 1Excellent essay writing demonstrated through school grades, extended essays, or independent writing projects
- 2Wide reading beyond the school syllabus—being able to name and discuss historians and their arguments shows intellectual curiosity
- 3Evidence of independent research or historical inquiry: local history projects, archive visits, history competitions (Concord Review, National History Day)
- 4Engagement with historiographical debates—not just knowing what happened but understanding how historians disagree about interpretation
- 5Extracurricular activities that demonstrate analytical thinking: debating, Model UN, journalism, or writing for school publications
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- ●Writing a personal statement that lists favourite historical periods without demonstrating analytical thinking about why history matters or how historians construct knowledge
- ●Focusing only on military and political history without showing awareness of social, cultural, economic, or intellectual approaches
- ●Not reading beyond the school textbook—top programmes expect applicants who have read actual historians, not just revision guides
Interview & Admission Tests
Oxford and Cambridge conduct interviews centred on unseen primary source analysis: you'll be given a document you've never seen and asked to interpret it in real time. They test how you think, not what you know. Practise reading unfamiliar texts and forming arguments under pressure. Some US programmes require a writing sample—submit your best analytical essay, not a narrative one.
General Preparation
These recommendations cover general preparation across Singapore universities. Specific programme requirements may differ—detailed per-programme requirements coming soon.
IB Diploma
- •History HL (essential)
- •English A HL (strongly recommended)
- •Economics or Geography HL (helpful)
A-Level
- •H2 History (essential)
- •H1 General Paper (excellent grade)
- •H2 English Literature or Economics (helpful)
AP
- •AP World History or AP European History (essential)
- •AP English Language (recommended)
- •AP US History (helpful)
IGCSE
- •History (essential, high grade)
- •English (A*/A)
- •Geography (helpful)
Skills & Aptitudes
NTU IB / A-Level admission requirements:NTU Admissions
Where to Study in Singapore
School of Humanities
Similar Majors
Considering this major beyond Singapore?
View the global university major guide →
Frequently Asked Questions
What do you study in History?
History is the disciplined study of past events, societies, and ideas—not to memorize dates, but to understand how the world came to be what it is and to develop the analytical skills to navigate its future. Historians learn to evaluate evidence, construct arguments from primary sources, and communicate complex narratives with clarity and precision.
What can you do after a History degree?
Typical entry-level roles: Graduate Trainee (Civil Service), Editorial Assistant, Museum/Archive Assistant, Research Assistant, Junior Policy Analyst (starting salary $35,000–$55,000 (US) / £22,000–£32,000 (UK) / A$45,000–$60,000 (Australia)). Key industries: Government & Civil Service, Law (with conversion), Journalism & Publishing, Museums, Archives & Heritage, Education (Schools & Universities). Steady but sector-dependent. Direct 'historian' roles are limited, but the analytical, research, and communication skills history develops are in demand across…
Which high-school courses prepare you for History?
Recommended IB courses: HL History, HL English A: Language & Literature; Recommended AP courses: AP World History, AP US History or AP European History, AP English Language & Composition; Recommended A-Levels: History, English Literature, Politics or Economics.
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