Dr. Elena Ramirez

Decline in Creative Arts Enrolments: Australia at Risk of Becoming an 'Artless Country'

Collapsing University Arts Courses Threaten Australia's Cultural Future

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Unpacking Australia's Creative Arts Enrolment Crisis in Higher Education

Australia's higher education landscape is witnessing a troubling trend: a sustained decline in creative arts enrolments that threatens the nation's cultural fabric. Recent research highlights how university arts courses are collapsing under multiple pressures, raising alarms about the country becoming an 'artless country'. This crisis is not just about numbers; it's a systemic issue affecting universities, students, and the broader creative economy. 66 65

Creative arts, encompassing fields like visual arts, performing arts, music, design, and media, have long been pillars of Australian universities. Defined fully as the Bachelor of Creative Arts (BCA) or related degrees such as Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Bachelor of Music (BMus), these programs foster innovation, critical thinking, and cultural expression. However, enrolment data reveals a sharp downturn, prompting urgent discussions on policy reforms.

The Stark Statistics: A Decade of Declining Enrolments

Graph showing decline in creative arts commencing enrolments in Australian universities from 2015 to 2024

Department of Education statistics paint a clear picture of the decline in creative arts enrolments Australia-wide. In 2015, there were 32,489 domestic commencing students in creative arts; by 2024, this figure had plummeted to 25,405—a 21.8% drop. 54 Total undergraduate enrolments in creative arts degrees fell from 75,595 in 2018 to 72,174 in 2023, a 4.5% decrease nationally, with 30 out of 46 higher education providers recording declines, some exceeding 50%. 65

This mirrors broader trends in Society and Culture fields, which saw commencing enrolments drop from 107,007 in 2015 to 98,994 in 2024. While overall domestic higher education enrolments rose slightly by 1% from 2023 to 2024 (1,076,027 to 1,086,789), creative disciplines bucked the trend due to targeted pressures. 54 9

The decline feeds from secondary education, where Year 12 ATAR arts subject enrolments fell 21% nationally from 2015 to 2023. Drama dropped 39%, dance 38%, media 25%, music 16%, and visual arts 14%, shrinking the pipeline into university programs. 65

The Job-Ready Graduates Package: A Key Culprit

Implemented in 2021 by the former Morrison government, the Job-Ready Graduates (JRG) package aimed to steer students toward 'job-ready' fields like STEM by adjusting student contributions. However, it dramatically increased fees for creative arts and humanities, exacerbating the decline in creative arts enrolments Australia faces today.

Under JRG, creative arts student contributions rose 19% initially (2020-2021) and 42% by 2026, while Society and Culture fields surged 116% (2020-2021) and 160% cumulatively. In 2026, a domestic student in a Commonwealth-supported place pays $9,537 annually for performing or visual arts—double the $4,738 for mathematics—and up to $17,399 for humanities, media, or curatorial studies. 66

  • Post-JRG peak in 2021, creative arts enrolments dropped 5.6% by 2023.
  • Society and Culture applications fell 7.3% due to affordability barriers.
  • Equity impacts: Disproportionately affects women, low socio-economic status (SES), regional, and Indigenous students, who comprise larger shares of arts enrollees.

Universities Australia CEO Luke Sheehy calls JRG reform 'urgent', noting it pushes students away from study altogether. 66

University Course Cuts: Dismantling the Creative Pipeline

Low enrolments have triggered a wave of course discontinuations, with 48 creative arts degrees axed between 2018 and 2025—21 in Victoria, 14 in Queensland, 12 in New South Wales, and 1 in Western Australia. Eight more were significantly reduced. 65 98

Examples include:

  • Federation University (VIC): Bachelor of Visual Arts, Bachelor of Music Theatre (amalgamated), Visual Arts PhD (all 2022).
  • Griffith University (QLD): Bachelor of Popular Music (2018), Contemporary and Applied Theatre major (2019).
  • Queensland University of Technology (QLD): Bachelor of Music (2018), Bachelor of Dance Performance (2020), several masters (2018).
  • University of Newcastle (NSW): Bachelor of Creative Industries (2020), Bachelor of Fine Arts (2018).
  • RMIT University (VIC): Master of Art in Public Space (2024).

These cuts remove entire disciplinary pipelines, especially in regional areas. Restructures at Australian National University, University of Technology Sydney, and Macquarie University have further slashed creative departments. 66

National Advocates for Arts Education (NAAE) documents over 50 discontinued or reduced offerings, urging a national inquiry. 98

Regional Disparities and Equity Challenges

The crisis hits unevenly. Queensland saw a 45% drop in Year 12 arts enrolments (2015-2023), Western Australia 44%, while ACT bucked the trend with +43% due to music and visual arts growth. Regional universities like Charles Sturt and Southern Cross have lost key programs, limiting access for rural students. 65

Low-SES and First Nations students face barriers from high fees and location. JRG exacerbates this, as arts fields attract diverse cohorts but offer lower immediate earnings, prolonging HELP debt repayment.

Explore full Department of Education statistics. 54

Economic and Cultural Implications for Australia

Beyond academia, collapsing university arts courses jeopardize Australia's $67.4 billion cultural and creative sector (2.5% GDP in 2023-24, up 6.6% from prior year), which employs more than mining. 97 Artists are highly educated, applying skills in education, research, and consulting, but workforce gaps loom without graduates.

Prof Sandra Gattenhof warns of a 'real reduction in creative and cultural workforce capacities' within five years, undermining National Cultural Policy Revive's goals for diverse storytelling. 66 Dr John Nicholas Saunders echoes: 'We risk becoming an artless country.'

Stakeholder Voices: Calls for Action

Experts decry the 'polycrisis': policy, funding, and market shifts. Universities Australia pushes JRG reversal per the Australian Universities Accord. 65 NAAE seeks a bipartisan inquiry into arts training.

The Labor government, despite opposing JRG, retains it amid delays. Revive allocates $2.6 million for in-school arts over five years—versus $75.6 million for STEM—despite creativity's role in 21st-century skills. 55

Case Studies: Universities on the Frontline

At Federation University, Gippsland Campus lost Bachelor of Visual Arts and honours in 2022, eroding regional creative hubs. QUT reduced Bachelor of Fine Arts (Acting) units from 14 to 8, cutting study hours amid enrolment slumps. Griffith University's Queensland College of Art axed jewellery and print majors (2022), shifting to online-heavy delivery.

These cases illustrate step-by-step decline: low enrolments → reviews → cuts → fewer offerings → further drops, creating vicious cycles.

Pathways Forward: Solutions and Reforms

Solutions demand multi-level action:

  • Reform JRG: Shift to lifetime earnings-based contributions, as recommended by Universities Accord.
  • Equitable funding: Match STEM's $75m with arts investments, supporting Revive.
  • National inquiry: Track courses, bolster teacher training in arts.
  • Hybrid models: Integrate creative arts with STEM (STEAM) for appeal.
  • Career visibility: Highlight transferable skills via platforms like higher ed career advice.

Explore lecturer jobs or professor jobs in creative fields at Australian universities.

NAAE's full course snapshot. 98

Rusty bars with a padlock and graffiti

Photo by Ian on Unsplash

Future Outlook: Reviving Creative Higher Education

Without intervention, Australia risks cultural stagnation. Yet, opportunities exist: growing creative economy demand, policy windows post-Accord, and global STEAM trends. Universities can innovate with micro-credentials, industry partnerships, and higher ed jobs in emerging areas like digital media.

Prospective students, check Rate My Professor for arts courses or university jobs to build careers. Policymakers must act to prevent an artless future.

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Dr. Elena Ramirez

Contributing writer for AcademicJobs, specializing in higher education trends, faculty development, and academic career guidance. Passionate about advancing excellence in teaching and research.

Frequently Asked Questions

📉What is the extent of the decline in creative arts enrolments in Australian universities?

Domestic commencing enrolments fell 21.8% from 32,489 in 2015 to 25,405 in 2024. Total undergrads dropped 4.5% from 2018-2023.54

💰How has the Job-Ready Graduates package affected arts students?

It raised fees by 19-42% for creative arts, up to 160% for society/culture, making degrees like visual arts $9,537/year vs $4,738 for math.66

✂️How many creative arts courses have been discontinued since 2018?

48 degrees axed, 8 reduced significantly across states, e.g., QUT's Bachelor of Dance, Federation's Visual Arts.98

📊What are the economic impacts of this decline?

Threatens $67.4b creative sector (2.5% GDP), employing more than mining, with skills vital for innovation.97

🏫Which universities have cut the most arts programs?

Victoria (21 cuts), Queensland (14), NSW (12). Examples: Griffith, Monash, RMIT.

⚖️How does this affect equity groups?

Hits women, low-SES, regional/Indigenous students hardest, limiting access to arts learning.

📜What role does Revive policy play?

Aims to revive arts but funds arts minimally ($2.6m) vs STEM ($75m), risking goals.55

💡What solutions are proposed?

Reform JRG fees, boost arts funding, national inquiry, STEAM integration. See career advice.

💼Are there still career opportunities in creative arts?

Yes, demand in education, media, design. Check higher ed jobs and lecturer jobs.

🎓What is the secondary school link?

Year 12 arts enrolments down 21% (2015-2023), drama -39%, shrinking uni pipeline.65

🗣️Who are key experts warning about this?

Prof Sandra Gattenhof, Dr John Saunders (Polycrisis paper), Luke Sheehy (Unis Australia).

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