A tiny California college whose graduates out-earn Harvard and Stanford grads is changing how we train students to enter the job market

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Harvey Mudd

Harvey Mudd Facebook

Harvey Mudd College.

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Harvey Mudd College (HMC), a tiny liberal-arts school in Claremont, California, is an engineering, science, and mathematics powerhouse.

In fact, its graduates out-earn those from Harvard and Stanford about 10 years into their careers.

But in addition to its reputation for producing strong graduates in the STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, and math), HMC students - also called Mudders - embrace the arts.

The school not only encourages, but demands, Mudders graduate with a strong liberal arts background, taking just as many courses in the humanities as they must in core introductory courses in the sciences.

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HMC describes its core curriculum as "an academic boot camp in the STEM disciplines-math, physics, chemistry, biology, computer science and engineering-as well as classes in writing and critical inquiry" which "gives students a broad scientific foundation and the skills to think and to solve problems across disciplines."

The approach closely mirrors advice from some experts on how schools can develop students able to compete with automation, which has become an increasingly disruptive force in the labor market.

Self-driving cars, for example, threaten the job security of millions of American truck drivers, and at wealth management firms, robo-advisers are replacing humans.

"Absolutely I think there's value in some level of understanding computer science," Shon Burton, CEO of HiringSolved, previously told Business Insider.

Harvey Mudd College

Harvey Mudd College/Facebook

HMC describes its core curriculum as an academic boot camp.

Burton, whose company leverages AI technology to make job recruiting more efficient, said that students must embrace the humanities to become critical thinkers who improvise in ways that robots cannot.

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At HMC, the computer science program is so strong that elite STEM-focused schools have taken note.

The California Institute of Technology, for example, invited educators from HMC to come to their campus and provide training on how to teach computer science classes for better student retention, Caltech professor Yisong Yue told Business Insider. Caltech is a premiere science and engineering college and was labeled the top school in the world for delivering work-ready graduates in 2016.

Part of this success is due to the thoughtful way HMC has chosen to structure learning, Jim Boerkoel, a computer science professor at HMC, told Business Insider.

"Everybody arrives and they have to take at least one computer science course, which is fairly unique for many schools, particularly liberal arts schools," Boerkoel said.

The introductory computer science course is intentionally broader than most intro courses. While the traditional approach features a programming-focused class, HMC redesigned its intro sequence to touch on programming, logic, software development, Artificial Intelligence, and other topics that compose the field as a whole.

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The school also provides both basic and advanced sections of the intro course so students who might otherwise dominate the discussion don't intimidate students who are less familiar with computer science.

"Those changes have led to some pretty big advances and equity across gender," Boerkoel said.

So much so that last year, HMC graduated its first female majority computer science class. Nationwide, more than 84% of computer science undergraduate majors are male, according to the Computing Research Association.

"They have an extraordinary undergraduate education program," Caltech professor Yue said.

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