For the stereotypes:
HUMSS may not focus on numbers and concepts, but I tell you, it is not an easy strand.
To begin with, social science is a field of science that deals with studying of the society and how it works. It helps people understand why a certain occurrence happened. It helps us understand the world beyond our limits. It tries to answer where, what, when, why, and how. It can make us comprehend things we thought we wouldn't know. Yes, I know. Social science is amazing.
Not convinced? Okay, then. These are the seven different disciplines of social science that can make you raise your eyebrows.
1) Knowing how policy, power, laws, foreign affairs, and etc. work is tackled by Political Science. This discipline basically studies how the government works, how do the elected officials and public servants allocate power, how do the branches of the government work and a lot more. Politics affects every aspect of our lives that contributes to the welfare of a nation. You can have various of options when you grow up as a political scientist. You can be a budget analyst, researcher, politician, lawyer, sales manager, public relations specialist and a lot more.
2)Anthropology is the study of ancient society and their cultural traditions. Through this, we can lean on finding commonality and differences. If there is no anthropology, there wouldn't be new ideas and knowledge based on what happened in past societies. Community developmental worker, international aid worker, local government officer, anthropologists, market researcher are some awesome careers this discipline offers.
3) The discipline that deals with the allocation of budget and overcoming scarce resources is economics. It deals with people's wants and needs. If economics does not exist, then we cannot fully grasp the idea of having unlimited wants and needs in the context of limited resources. This discipline might be in order to establish balance and there infinite needs. No economics, means no budget, no business, no finance, etc.
4) The study of people relating with each other and systematically studying human society are covered by sociology. This explains how and why things are occurring. It studies the root of unemployment, different reasons why people migrate, public relations with the fisher folks and their problems towards the government and a lot more. Through sociology, we can uncover various causes as to why a phenomenon is occurring. Research and planning, criminal justice, government, public relations and etc. can be done through sociology.
5) Studying human population and its activities is covered by demography. This is where the census and other vital statistics are from. This is where the different factors that are causing population growth or population decay is studied. There are different factors affecting human population such as fertility, death, migration, and etc. where we wouldn't have come to know about if it wasn't for demography.
6) Psychology -- The study of mind and why individuals behave a certain way. Without psychology, we wouldn't be able to pinpoint the different causes and reasons why people behave a certain way and how we can help people who are different from others. It explains how we feel, how we learn, how we interact. It plays a vital role in describing the crazy of our mind and the intelligence behind it.
7) The study of different languages and how it evolved overtime is done through linguistics. This discipline identifies the underlying cultural tradition and customs based on the languages that are being studied. We can able to know and comprehend why things occur just by studying the language of a certain society because it is also a gateway in knowing their identity and culture and correlate them to today's language and culture.
Need a proof? These two studies in social science are proof that this is not just some course to take up.
One study is done in Umea University and it talks
about how chronic stress and depression accelerates aging. It talks about the
telomere which is the outermost part of the chromosome. With increasing age,
telomeres shorten, and studies have shown that oxidative stress and
inflammation accelerates this shortening. The research team shows that
shorter telomere length is associated with both recurrent depression and
cortisol levels indicative of exposure to chronic stress. This study includes
91 respondents with depression and 451 healthy controls. Their stress
regulation is also measured. The results show that the telomere length is
shorter than those of healthy control group.According to the researchers of
this study, the fact that depressed patients as a group have shorter telomere
lengths compared to healthy individuals can be largely explained by the fact
that more depressed people than healthy people have disturbed cortisol
regulation, which underscores that cortisol regulation and stress play a major
role in depressive disorders.
Umeå University. (2011,
November 10). Depression and chronic stress accelerates aging. ScienceDaily.
Retrieved January 15, 2017 from
www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111109093729.html
Another study talks about the economic
impacts of migration, a research made in Harvard University. This study is
about the immigrants' effect on the Northern European countries. It shows that
as immigrants are more often outside of the labor force or unemployed, it
has been assumed that they spend more time on welfare and other forms of social
assistance compared to natives. While the US literature has concentrated
on wages, more European studies analyze employment assimilation. Typically,
immigrants are found to experience lower employment and wages than natives at
entry. Immigration is often viewed as a large burden for European public
or as a possible saviour if correctly harnessed. On average, immigrants
appear to have a minor positive net for host countries. These benefits are not
uniformly distributed across the native population and sectors of the economy.
This conclusion means that the migration in host countries does not
have that of a big impact to their economy.
Kerr, S. P. (2011, January). Economic
Impacts of Immigration: A Survey. Retrieved from
http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/09-013_15702a45-fbc3-44d7-be52-477123ee58d0.pdf
Did HUMSS chose me or
did I chose HUMSS?
Being in the HUMSS strand is not an easy task.
You have to have this passion in you to investigate more, to dig deeper and
know more. You have to have this skill of learning how to look through in
different knowledge fed to you. Being able to express my thoughts and learn how
to express them well is a part of why I chose HUMSS. Yes, I chose HUMSS. And
HUMSS will never be affiliated with the word 'lang' because this strand offers
so much more than what stereotypes see. Yes, we may not deal with mind-boggling
concepts and stacks of terms to memorise but we deal with so much more than
what the eyes see. We deal with things some people cannot perceive because HUMSS
is never in the surface of learning but is within it. Some people may not see
it now, but HUMSS contributes so much in the world may it be in education,
government, literature, society and etc. Studying humanities and social
sciences is harder than what it looks like, believe me.
I've been through different brainstorming
activities just to come up with an idea for a script. I have been in the sea of
readings and reviewing terms and concepts older than me. I have been in the
void, lost for words, to write the perfect prose and poetry. I tell you this,
it is not a valid reason to look down on other strands or courses in the face
of numbers and concepts and terms or be proud of their strand
just because they seem to study 'harder' concepts and ideas because all of us,
whatever our strand is, experience lack of sleep, bodies driven by caffeine and
tear-stained nights due to workload. My reply to your 'HUMSS ka lang' is this:
"Eh kasi HUMSS ako." I am proud of my strand. The workload drives me
nuts and somehow makes me want to give up. But, I am in love with the workload.
I am in love with what I do and with what I learn. Yes, I admit, I am tired and
sometimes running out of ideas, but aren't we all? Understanding the mess of
the society, creating stories, learning the art of governance, and seeing
through a world where not everyone sees is why Humanities and Social Sciences
is worth it. And that, my friend, is more than 'lang'.

