Underwater basket weaving
Template:Short description Underwater basket weaving is an idiom referring pejoratively to supposedly useless or absurd college or university courses and often generally to refer to a perceived decline in educational standards.<ref>Tuckett, Alan: Underwater basket weaving. The Guardian, 13 May 2003</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The term also serves as an intentionally humorous generic answer to questions about an academic degree. It is also used to humorously refer to any non-academic elective course, specifically one that does not count towards any graduation requirements.
Possible origin of the phrase
In weaving willow baskets, a trough of water is needed in which to soak the dried willow rods. They are then left to stand until pliable and ready to be used in weaving. The weaving is, however, usually not done under water (see counterexample below).<ref>Basket-making materials: Rattans and Willows Template:Webarchive. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Information Sheet C6</ref> An issue of The American Philatelist from 1956 refers to the village of Stebbins, Alaska where "Underwater basket weaving is the principal industry of the employables among the 94 Eskimos here. By way of explanation – the native reeds used in this form of basketry are soaked in water and the weavers create their handiwork with their hands and raw materials completely submerged in water throughout the process of manufacture".<ref>The American Philatelist v.70, American Philatelic Association, 1956</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Early use
The phrase in its pejorative sense has been used since at least the mid-1950s. According to a 1953 article in the Boston Globe on "Hepster Lingo", "Any snap course in school is 'underwater basket weaving.Template:'" In a letter to the editor of the Los Angeles Times in 1956, a correspondent bemoaned an alleged decline in academic standards among college football programs and mentioned "majoring in underwater basket weaving, or the preparation and serving of smorgasbord, or, particularly at Berkeley, the combined course of anatomy and panty-raiding".<ref>JUNIUS, South Pasadena College Pro Football Hit. Los Angeles Times, June 4, 1956</ref> The following year, an article in the National Review mentioned that "the bored students in the educationists' courses call those dreary subjects 'underwater basket-weaving coursesTemplate:'",<ref>Russell Kirk: A Stranglehold on Education. National Review 1957</ref> and another year on a newspaper column noted that "One seaside university is bowing to the stern educational demands of the times by eliminating its popular course in underwater basket weaving".<ref>Fletcher Knebel: 'Potomac Fever' column Template:Webarchive. Appleton Post Crescent, May 14, 1958</ref> An article in the Daily Collegian at Penn State University in 1961 refers to a parody in which "a typical Miami coed majoring in underwater basket weaving was interviewed".<ref>Rabe, Diane. Sunshine Scholars Mimed at Pep Rally. Daily Collegian. September 28, 1961</ref> An article from 1976 refers to football players so dumb that they had to take underwater basket weaving,<ref>Black, Darrell. Brawn, and brainRome News-Tribune, January 21, 1976, Rome, Georgia Template:Dead link</ref> and another 1976 article refers to underwater basket-weaving as "an old old family joke".<ref>Hazel Geissler. Prints Framed, Draperies Hung Evening Independent, St. Petersburg, Florida, March 16, 1976</ref>
Current use
In recent years, many subjects in the humanities have adopted scientific methodologies under the category of social sciences. Some of the courses offered in these subjects have drawn criticism; for instance, an op-ed expressed concern over the lack of rigor and scientific relevancy in coursework at the University of Minnesota.<ref>Howard Root: No hard sciences? Then no job offer. Star Tribune April 1, 2014</ref> Such criticism has been accused of unfairly stereotyping the social sciences as underwater basket weaving subjects.<ref>Underwater basket weaving isn't worthless. Minnesota Daily April 24, 2014</ref>
Dave Ramsey, American personal finance writer and radio host, has used the self-invented term "German Polka History" to describe university degree programs that are unlikely to result in a career and which he thus advises people against pursuing. He uses the term along with a degree in "Left-Handed Puppetry" as an umbrella description to avoid singling any specific degree for ridicule.<ref>Ramsey, Dave and Rachel Cruze (2014). Smart Money, Smart Kids: Raising the Next Generation to Win with Money. Ramsey Press, Template:ISBN</ref><ref>The Dave Ramsey Show, "What College Degree Should I Get?" via YouTube Published on Dec 12, 2015; accessed April 08, 2017</ref>
Notable uses
Template:Quote The phrase was used during the Vietnam War era to describe the sort of major that many young men who would otherwise not have entered college undertook to escape the draft.<ref>Rick Atkinson: The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point's Class of 1966. Published by Henry Holt and Co., 1999. Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN. 608 pages</ref> US Senator Gordon L. Allott referred in 1968 to "the situation that we were in after World War II where we had universities setting up courses in underwater basket weaving, and all this sort of thing".<ref>Hearings, Reports and Prints of the Senate Committee on Appropriations. United States Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Published by U.S. G.P.O., 1968</ref> Senator Robert Byrd used the phrase in 1969 when questioning the use of funds to offer professional training to Cuban refugees.<ref>Second Supplemental Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1969 United States Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations</ref> The University of Portsmouth had a joke syllabus for underwater basket weaving on the Technology faculty pages,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and another joke syllabus proposal was posted by a University of Central Arkansas student magazine.<ref>Shinnie, Ferri: New degree to be offered The Vino 2003 Volume 21 - Issue 4</ref>
US punk band NOFX referred to an underwater basket weaving course in their song "Anarchy Camp".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The phrase appears in the MIT application process as a humorous example suggesting students should simply state their current interests.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
As a taught course
Since 1980, Reed College in Portland, Oregon has occasionally offered an underwater basket weaving class during Paideia, its festival of learning that offers informal, non-credit courses.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The Student Resource Center at the University of Arizona offered a submerged snorkeling basket-weaving course in spring 1998.<ref>Michelle J. Jones: Build your own basket... underwater Arizona Daily Wildcat, November 24, 1997</ref><ref>Watery Weaving 101 - Frustration turns pupil into basket case. Arizona Daily Star, April 14, 1998</ref> In early 2009, a Rutgers University scuba diving instructor offered a one-off course.<ref>Sacharow, Fredda: Recession buster: A Rutgers course for $1 Template:Webarchive Focus, February 4, 2009</ref><ref>Underwater Basket Weaving, Dollar Menu, Rutgers Recreation</ref> Underwater Basket Weaving is a trademark of the US Scuba Center Inc.,<ref>United States Patent and Trademark Office Serial No. 75217070</ref> which offers a specialty class designed to improve or more fully enjoy diving skills from which participants can "take home a memorable souvenir."<ref>US Scuba Center Inc.: Specialty Classes</ref>
As an April Fools joke, Coursera offered an online course on underwater basket weaving on April 1, 2013. The class was supposed to "consist of short lecture and demonstration videos, between 8 and 10 minutes in length, short quizzes, and practical weaving exercises."<ref name="UBW-Dunne">Template:Cite web</ref>