
Universities in Sri Lanka face real pressures such as budgets tightening and the tension of every programme to prove its value when it comes to cultivating art. For this reason arts and humanities subjects are viewed as luxuries whereas they should not be because they teach skills that matter deeply in today’s workplaces and society. Cutting them evidently weakens students’ abilities to think deeply, connect with others, and navigate complex issues. Such skills are required in Sri Lankan graduates across sectors.
There are practical and affordable ways Sri Lankan universities can make arts and humanities vibrant, visible, and valuable on campus and they are:
Arts and humanities subjects develop strengths that employers across Sri Lanka want, clear communication, creative thinking, teamwork, empathy, and adaptability. These are seen in how theatre, literature, history and communication courses help students express ideas, work with others, and tackle new situations.
Simple actions Sri Lankan campuses can take:
These steps don’t require big budgets. They just need coordination and creativity.
Innovation often happens when different perspectives come together. Artists, writers, historians, and philosophers bring design thinking, ethical awareness and people-centred insight to fields like technology and business.
What Sri Lankan universities can do:
This doesn’t need large grant funding. Even small funding or shared spaces spark collaboration would be enough.
Arts and humanities help learners understand context, interpret nuance, and hold multiple viewpoints, essential when dealing with issues from public policy to community storytelling.
Low-cost ways to build these capacities:
In Sri Lanka, where communities and cultures are rich and diverse, these skills are especially valuable.
Artificial intelligence and automation are changing work everywhere. What machines struggle with, empathy, judgement, ethical reasoning, creativity, is exactly what arts and humanities teach.
Practical steps for campus application:
This helps graduates not just use technology, but shape it with insight and care.
When arts and humanities thrive on Sri Lankan campuses, students can gain better communication and empathy in multicultural workplaces, creative approaches to challenges in local business, education, and governance and become balanced professionals who can blend technical knowledge with human understanding.
From short design courses at Open University to cultural and history programmes at local campuses, Sri Lankan students can benefit immensely when arts and humanities are woven into campus life, without the need for huge spending.
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