Shepherd art programs receive NASAD accreditation
Shepherd University’s Department of Contemporary Art and Theater has been approved for membership in the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD). The B.A. in art education and the B.F.A. in graphic design, painting, photography, computer imagery, printmaking and sculpture were approved for accreditation. Shepherd’s program is only the second in West Virginia to receive the accreditation.
“It establishes what the art department has known for a very long time-that our programs are unique and that they offer a really good learning experience for our students,” said Rhonda Smith, chair of the Department of Contemporary Art and Theater. “That has been validated by this accreditation, so we’re really, really pleased.”
Dow Benedict, dean of the School of Arts and Humanities, said earning accreditation from NASAD has been a long and demanding process that involved a thorough examination and evaluation of facilities, faculty, curriculum, students and graduates.
“NASAD accreditation is the highest level of peer evaluation that can be achieved by a visual art and design program,” Benedict said. “They have only accredited about 350 schools in the world and accreditation by NASAD indicates Shepherd has achieved a standard expected of a program of premier quality.”
Benedict pointed out Shepherd joins other accredited schools in the Baltimore-Washington, D.C., metro region such as the Maryland Institute College of Art and Design, the Corcoran School of Art and George Mason University.
“Accreditation of the visual arts program at Shepherd places us in a highly unique respected category of school,” Benedict said.
Smith said she often fields questions from prospective students and their parents asking if the program is accredited, and she hopes the fact that it is will make coming to Shepherd a more attractive option for students interested in pursuing art.
“I think for lots of people accreditation becomes one of those things they’re looking for in a college,” Smith said.