What Can I do with a Degree in Linguistics?
The field of linguistics is extremely diverse, intersecting with many areas such as anthropology, computer science, engineering, foreign language study, neurology, philosophy, psychology, sociology, and speech & hearing science, among others. As a result, a degree in linguistics can provide the foundation for a wide range of jobs and careers (see below for some examples). Studying linguistics helps you develop many important skills such as analytical and critical thinking, problem solving, argumentation, data collection and analysis, and written and oral expression. As a student of linguistics, you will become familiar with many different languages and cultures and, as a result, also develop cross-cultural skills. Each of these skills are useful in many careers that may not otherwise seem related to linguistics. Below you will find a list of some of the career paths that graduates with a BA in linguistics have followed as well as some references that may prove useful. Doing a search on google.com for 'linguistics jobs' may also yield some interesting results.
Language teaching
- foreign language teaching
- teaching English as a second language
- teaching English as a foreign language
- teaching English as a first language
- teaching in literacy programs
Information technology
When at OSU (Class of 2018) Amad majored in Computer Science Engineering with a focus on Artificial Intelligence while minoring in Linguistics, focusing on Computational Linguistics. He took CL1 and CL2, as well as syntax courses within the Linguistics departments, while also doing research with Dr. Micha Elsner and Dr. Mike White. Amad’s research with Dr. Elsner focused on using graph theory to understand the phonotactics of low resource languages while his research with Dr. White focused on paraphrase generation and mono-lingual alignment for use with an artificial patient chat bot. Amad currently works as a Data Scientist at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital doing research using NLP to solve healthcare problems. He works with a highly collaborative small team of data scientists and is the only one with substantial linguistics background. Amad’s current projects focus on identifying language used in clinical notes to predict suicide risk of a patient, matching symptom descriptions to descriptions of genome mutations, and looking at the language of patients to determine the impact of social determinants of health on their lives. He has presented his work at conferences including SIGMORPHON (Special Interest Group on Computational Morphology and Phonology), and AMIA (American Medical Informatics Association) while also attending EMNLP (Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing). Amad plans to pursue a graduate degree in NLP in the near future.
Publishing
- editor (for a publishing house, working with government or educational documents)
- lexicographer (e.g. working for Merriam-Webster)
- technical writer
Language Services Industry
- translator/editor
- interpreter (in-person or remote)
- subtitler
Professions
- speech pathologist/therapist
- accent coach
- audiologist
- college/university professor (combining research, teaching and service)
- lawyer
- medical doctor or researcher
Miscellaneous
- librarian civil service employee
- foreign relief worker
- computer programmer
- writer/editor
- marketing specialist
- missionary, e.g. working for SIL (Summer Institute of Linguistics www.sil.org), Wycliffe Bible Translators
Some resources:
- Hudson, Richard. 1990. Careers for Linguistics Graduates. For the Linguistics Association of Great Britain.
- Seelye, H. Ned and J. Laurence Day. 2001. Careers for Foreign Language Aficionados and Other Multilingual Types. McGraw-Hill.
- Jobs Area Index from the International Linguists Community Online
- Monster.com: jobs for linguists
- Career Planning from the University of New Hampshire.
- The Riley Guide: Sites with Job Listings