As Trump Goes After Universities, Students Are Now on the Chopping Block

Anonymous
In the early weeks of the Trump administration’s push to slash funding that colleges and universities rely on, grants and contracts had been cut and, in a few cases, researchers had been laid off.

In recent days, the fiscal pain has come to students.

At the University of Pennsylvania, administrators have asked departments in the School of Arts & Sciences, the university’s largest school, to cut incoming Ph.D. students. In some cases, that meant reneging on informal offers, according to Wendy Roth, a professor of sociology.

Her department had to decide which of the students would be “unaccepted.” Dr. Roth, chair of graduate education, was chosen to explain those decisions to them.

“Two of them, I would say, were extremely upset. One person was in tears,” she said. “It’s just the most terrible thing to get that kind of news when your plans are made.”

Since taking office, the Trump administration has issued orders that threaten to broadly undercut the financial foundation of university based research, including deep reductions in overhead cost reimbursements through the National Institutes of Health. Court challenges have paused some of the cuts, but universities are bracing for uncertainty. The University of Pennsylvania could face a $250 million hit in N.I.H. funding alone.

Members of the administration have cast the cuts as a way to reduce wasteful government spending, sometimes in political terms. Last month, Katie Miller, who is working with Elon Musk’s team to trim federal spending, said the cuts would end “liberal D.E.I. deans’ slush fund.”

In some cases, schools are pre-emptively cutting their expenses as a precautionary measure.

North Carolina State University announced on Feb. 14 that it was freezing most hiring. Stanford University announced on Feb. 26 that it was freezing staff hiring, citing “very significant risks” to the community. At the University of Louisville in Kentucky, President Kim Schatzel announced an “immediate pause” on faculty and staff hiring until July. She cited the potential loss of $20 to $23 million in N.I.H. research funding. Dozens of other schools have announced hiring freezes or “chills.”

Many of the cuts are now hitting graduate education, too, which is highly dependent on research grants, leaving students who had dreams of pursuing Ph.D.s with nowhere to go.

A graduate program in biological sciences at the University of California, San Diego, usually enrolls 25 new graduate students a year. This year, the number will be 17.

The reduction may seem small, but Kimberly Cooper, a biology professor, said the Trump cuts would ricochet through the university.

“I hate to sound fatalistic,” said Dr. Cooper, who specializes in the study of limb development. “But at this point I think they’re trying to break the academic enterprise. And cutting academic science has impacts on the educational mission of the entire university.”

At Penn, cuts to graduate programs were made across the board in the school’s 32 programs, professors said. The history department, for example, was asked to offer Ph.D. slots to only seven students, not the usual 17. In English, the normal cohort of 9 to 12 incoming students will be reduced to a maximum of six.

A letter signed by professors in 22 departments at Penn warned that the school’s decision would cause reputational damage.

Asked to comment, the university pointed to a statement signed by J. Larry Jameson, Penn’s interim president, posted on the school’s website, which noted that the cuts “represent an existential threat across our university and American higher education.”

Dr. Jameson said the school was pursuing “cost containment measures and new sources of revenue.” He added: “We will remain judicious, measured, deliberate and focused on sustaining our mission when determining any action.”

As the Trump administration vows to target schools over antisemitism and diversity initiatives, other programs that directly touch undergraduates, such as scholarships, could be affected, too, if the administration clears legal hurdles.

David Kazanjian, graduate chair of comparative literature at Penn, said the cuts to graduate students would reduce opportunities for undergraduates. With fewer graduate student teachers, class sizes may increase, for example.

The cost-cutting measures are taking effect across a variety of schools, from the Ivy League and large public research universities to smaller public schools. The administration’s decision to cap overhead reimbursements on National Institutes of Health grants to 15 percent could cut millions that schools have come to rely on to cover facilities and staff. The overhead rates normally vary depending on the grant recipients, but in some cases provide up to 60 percent of the grant in additional reimbursements.

Columbia University, which receives about $1.3 billion a year in N.I.H. funding, could lose up to $200 million a year from the formula change, according to one analysis by a group of university faculty and staff members and alumni called the Stand Columbia Society.

A graduate-student union at Columbia reported in a news release last month that university officials had proposed even more draconian cuts than Penn: eliminating up to 65 percent of incoming Ph.D. students in the School of Arts & Sciences. Following criticism, the cuts at Columbia were ultimately scaled back, and no firm numbers have been released.

The graduate workers at Columbia argued that there was no need for funding cuts, citing the university’s endowment, which grew to $14.9 billion at the close of 2024 from $13.6 billion in 2023. Yale, for example, one of the largest recipients of N.I.H. dollars, has announced that it would provide temporary funding from its own coffers for scholars.

A Columbia University official said that university endowments are generally restricted by purpose and in many cases could not be used to support Ph.D’s.

But this week, the Education Department said it would review all of Columbia’s federal contracts and grants, accusing the school of not doing enough to curb antisemitism on campus. The administration identified $51.4 million in contracts between Columbia and the federal government that could be subject to stop-work orders.

Schools with large endowments may also be a target of increased taxation. Endowments, generally accumulated with donor funds invested over decades, had largely been considered off limits for taxes because the universities operate as nonprofits.

But in 2017, during Mr. Trump’s first term, Republicans led a charge to impose a 1.4 percent excise tax on the investment income of large private university endowments. Now there are discussions of raising it to 14 percent, or even 21 percent.

The threatened N.I.H. cuts and the endowment tax comes on the heels of other major cutbacks at public land grant universities. Among the Trump administration’s first targets was a U.S. Agency for International Development program called “Feed the Future,” which funded 19 agricultural labs in 17 states. Many of those laboratories are now being shut down.

At U.C. San Diego, which was already facing state budget cuts, Dr. Cooper, the biology professor, said the fallout would have repercussions beyond universities if fewer students passed through their programs, and could affect entire sectors of the economy.

“The bigger issue in all this is that, this is our future biomedical work force,” she said.
Anonymous
I cannot even begin to express how incredibly foolish, vindictive, and short-sighted this is.

Do MAGA voters realize how much money and investment China is directing to their academic and research institutions? They're positioned to absolutely eat us for lunch if we divest in training the next generation of scientific and technologic experts.

Anonymous
This is great news! All these rich schools should be defunded. They have billion dollar endowments- use them instead of being a drain on taxpayer dollars!
Anonymous
Of course Trump is going after universities. That is the first thing dictators do. The uneducated are Trump's voter base.
Anonymous
I am very unclear on what exactly the MAGA folks think makes America great. If it’s not innovation and invention, what is it?
Anonymous
If Trump continues to enact his agenda against education, the colleges our kids have been working so hard to enter (and all the work we've done reading this forum, listening to podcasts, researching opportunities for them) will be for nothing.

We The People need to find a way to stop this catastrophic madness against our way of life and against our livelihoods and those of our kids.
Anonymous
I’m fairly open to the idea of change and believe that just because things have been done a certain way doesn’t mean it has to continue that way.

But, this is going to hurt the future of our country. We will decline in innovation even more than we had before and our manufacturing base will erode even further. I guess everyone can try to work at Walmart.
Anonymous
This is unbelievably sad. I'm on this forum because I'm a parent who cares deeply about investing in a strong education for my kids.

What can we collectively and individually do to stop this horrible leader who cares about nothing but lining his & his cronies bank accounts?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If Trump continues to enact his agenda against education, the colleges our kids have been working so hard to enter (and all the work we've done reading this forum, listening to podcasts, researching opportunities for them) will be for nothing.

We The People need to find a way to stop this catastrophic madness against our way of life and against our livelihoods and those of our kids.


Yup.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is great news! All these rich schools should be defunded. They have billion dollar endowments- use them instead of being a drain on taxpayer dollars!


Stupid is as stupid does.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is great news! All these rich schools should be defunded. They have billion dollar endowments- use them instead of being a drain on taxpayer dollars!


Cancer research = draining taxpayer dollars

There aren't enough for a post like this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’m fairly open to the idea of change and believe that just because things have been done a certain way doesn’t mean it has to continue that way.

But, this is going to hurt the future of our country. We will decline in innovation even more than we had before and our manufacturing base will erode even further. I guess everyone can try to work at Walmart.


Everything he is doing is to hurt our country.
Anonymous
Betrand Russell said:

"First, they fascinate the fools. Then they muzzle the intelligent".

He believed that this is how fascism always starts and this technique was as old as the Greek city-states and was used by the Nazis.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I cannot even begin to express how incredibly foolish, vindictive, and short-sighted this is.

Do MAGA voters realize how much money and investment China is directing to their academic and research institutions? They're positioned to absolutely eat us for lunch if we divest in training the next generation of scientific and technologic experts.



I wish people understood this. For one example, we have something like 50-70 years worth of oil left on the planet. Something is going to have to come next and whatever government invests in it is going to have a stranglehold on the world owning the source of energy. Why in the world we want to cede that power and leadership to China or Russia is beyond me.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m fairly open to the idea of change and believe that just because things have been done a certain way doesn’t mean it has to continue that way.

But, this is going to hurt the future of our country. We will decline in innovation even more than we had before and our manufacturing base will erode even further. I guess everyone can try to work at Walmart.


Everything he is doing is to hurt our country.


Yes and line his own pockets.
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