Since
World War II, artist training has become the charge of colleges and universities and contemporary art has become an increasingly academic and intellectual field. Prior to World War II an artist did not need a college degree. Since that time the
Bachelor of Fine Arts and then the
Master of Fine Arts became recommended degrees to be a professional artist. This change was facilitated by the passage of the
G.I. Bill in 1944, which allowed many World War II veterans to attend school, art school included. With the expansion of university art departments, independent art schools began to lose popularity. Students pursuing a career in art began enrolling at universities, rather than independent art schools, such as the
Art Students League, known for artists like
Jackson Pollock and
Mark Rothko. By the 1960s, the
School of Visual Arts,
Pratt Institute,
Cooper Union,
Princeton and
Yale had emerged as leading American art universities. Currently, the PhD in studio art is under debate as the new standard for a degree in professional art. Although, as of 2008, there are only two United States programs offering a PhD in studio art, PhDs in art are commonplace in the UK, Scandinavia, and the Netherlands. This is in reference to teaching positions for studio art at the college level. The PhD has been a standard requirement to be a professor of art education for many years. In his forthcoming book, ''Artists with PhD's'',
James Elkins presents the opinion the PhD will become the new standard, and offers the book as a resource for assessing these programs and for structuring future programs. However, the
College Art Association still recognizes the MFA as the terminal degree, stating "At this time, few institutions in the United States offer a PhD degree in studio art, and it does not appear to be a trend that will continue or grow, or that the PhD will replace the MFA". == Discipline-based art education in the early 1980s==