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Gender and Latin American Studies Among Dozens of Courses Axed at Texas A&M

Gender and Latin American Studies Among Dozens of Courses Axed at Texas A&M

Summary

Texas A&M University in East Texas has recently cut several certificate and minor programs, including gender studies, Latin American studies, and philosophy, due to low student enrollment and completion rates. The university says this is part of normal program reviews and to better allocate resources toward more in-demand programs linked to job opportunities.

Key Facts

  • East Texas A&M eliminated graduate certificates in public history, women’s and gender studies, and teaching history.
  • Several undergraduate minors removed include African American studies, Latin American and U.S. Latino studies, philosophy, communication studies, and gender studies.
  • University officials say the cuts reflect low student enrollment and completion over several years.
  • The changes are part of routine academic program reviews, not directly caused by Texas Senate Bill 37.
  • Senate Bill 37, passed in 2025, increases state oversight of Texas public universities.
  • The university is expanding programs linked to workforce needs, such as cybersecurity, data analytics, IT support, project management, and artificial intelligence.
  • Officials emphasize focusing on degrees that students want and skills employers seek.
  • Some observers think the cuts may reflect political pressure related to curriculum debates in Texas, but university leaders describe the changes as normal university management.
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