New Federal Guidelines Threaten Almost Half of Graduate Arts Programs
I have to admit, I admire the consistency. Every few years, somebody in government discovers the arts and reacts the way a homeowner reacts to finding a raccoon in the attic. Suddenly there are hearings, guidelines, efficiency reviews, funding debates, and a fresh round of questions about whether studying art, music, theater, creative writing, dance, or art history is a legitimate use of oxygen. And now here we are again. New federal policy shifts and funding pressures are creating uncertainty across higher education, with universities reducing graduate admissions, freezing programs, and rethinking budgets. Graduate programs—especially those without obvious corporate sponsors or billion-dollar research grants—are finding themselves squarely in the blast zone. Some universities have already suspended admissions or reduced graduate cohorts in arts-related fields, while broader federal funding disruptions have caused institutions to reconsider graduate enrollment altogether. Naturally...