But, as you cautioned yourself at the beginning of the thread, Purdue is mostly a STEM school.
Not saying it’s easy, or that they aren’t doing an outstanding job, but it’s easier to set all these things up with preprofessional majors, and, importantly, pre-professional students who are, by definition, going into college with a different mindset.
OP is worried, specifically, about a kid wanting a “non-pre”, humanities major, because such a student will have to start out even finding the field they want to work in, before they can then focus on how to gain a foothold.
I would think that the most interesting suggestion so far is GW, because while they may not do handholding, I understand that the school’s whole culture is focused on how to find internships and jobs in public policy. Don’t discount culture - if everyone around you is about the life of the mind and grad school, it’s hard to be the lone undergrad go-getter, but if going out into Washington DC for internships is normal and everyone talks about them, it may be the push a student needs.
Don’t know anything about High Point’s humanities, but the culture sounds so business- and money-focused, that I am wondering whether a student who does care about the academic side of her humanities studies will be happy there, or feel like she could have just gone to business school.