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Board of Regents mandate minor, certificate eliminations in controversial vote

Regents unanimously voted to instruct President Mark Welsh III to end 52 low-producing programs during Thursday meeting
Regent Michael J. Plank contemplates before the Board of Regents meeting on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024. (Jackson Stanley/The Battalion)
Regent Michael J. Plank contemplates before the Board of Regents meeting on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024. (Jackson Stanley/The Battalion)
Photo by Jackson Stanley

The Texas A&M System Board of Regents passed a resolution directing President Mark Welsh III to “take actions necessary to eliminate” 14 minors and 38 certificates during Thursday’s board meeting. 

The unprecedented action follows weeks of controversy and faculty criticism, as A&M’s Executive Vice President and Provost Alan Sams seeks to end 52 programs not meeting enrollment thresholds the Office of the Provost developed. The proposal breaks with established norms, as curricular changes historically begin at the faculty level. 

According to previous statements shared by an A&M spokesperson, inquiries into the LGBTQ studies minor in June 2023 prompted an investigation into programs with low enrollment or few graduates. Working with the deans, Sams directed the provost’s office to develop a process to inactivate these “low-producing programs.” 

The provost ordered deans to inform faculty to begin the inactivation process at the beginning of the fall semester with a deadline of late September. As previously reported by The Battalion, when faculty in the Women’s and Gender Studies program refused to inactivate the LGBTQ studies minor, a dean, under orders from the provost’s office, submitted the request in their stead. 

The resolution shows whether individual colleges appealed to save a minor or certificate alongside the reason and response. Of the 26 minors not meeting the enrollment thresholds, faculty members did not appeal 10. Sams accepted 12 appeals but denied four others: LGBTQ studies, global health, Asian studies and geophysics. Of the 44 initial certificate inactivations, faculty did not appeal 17. For the programs that were appealed, Sams denied 21 and saved six.

Faculty members have criticized the new thresholds, saying excluding them from the process violates shared governance, especially because it involves curricular processes. Most only learned about the new enrollment thresholds when ordered to end minors and certificates. At the Oct. 14 Faculty Senate meeting, senators grilled Sams for almost two hours, arguing against the proposal. Previously, the Speaker of the Faculty Senate Angie Hill Price called it a “deeply flawed” process that “lacked meaningful input from many stakeholders.” 

Executive Vice President and Provost Alan Sams answers a question during the Faculty Senate meeting hosted in Rudder Tower on Monday, Oct. 14, 2024. (Jenna Isbell/The Battalion)

When faced with an open records request seeking information about the group that developed the thresholds, university officials requested the Office of the Attorney General intervene. The state office then denied the request due to legal exemptions, claiming it “relates to policymaking because it concerns the overall administration of Texas A&M University’s academic programs.” 

“Specifically, the information pertains to Texas A&M University’s policies for phasing out or continuing low enrollment minors or certificate programs,” the report from the Office of the Attorney General reads. “The noted information … reflects advice, opinions, and recommendations of university administrators on policies that have not yet been implemented.”

After a lull following October’s Faculty Senate meeting, the Board of Regents unveiled its agenda last week, which included the resolution that would force Welsh to take action supporting the inactivations if passed. The resolution notes Welsh believes “the current review process [should] be halted and restarted” with input from the Faculty Senate. The following paragraph says “the Board of Regents of the System believes sufficient faculty review” occurred. 

The resolution, if passed, would also direct Chancellor John Sharp to revise A&M System policy to include standards for low-producing minors and certificates. It would also see the Board of Regents direct presidents of other universities under the A&M umbrella to review minors and certificates “to identify any low-producing programs that may require elimination.” 

According to the Faculty Senate’s bylaws, the Executive Committee, or EC — the senate’s top officials, including Price — may act on the senate’s behalf during emergencies. Because of the nature of the resolution, the EC convened on Tuesday to reject the inactivation of minors and certificates on behalf of the Faculty Senate, which meets on Nov. 11. According to A&M’s Standard Administrative Procedure, or SAP, inactivations must pass the Faculty Senate before being finalized. 

In her announcement sharing the decision, Price said the EC took the emergency action in the event “the Regents’ resolution would circumvent the senate’s ability to vote on these agenda items.” 

“At our last Faculty Senate meeting, many Senators, on behalf of their constituents and themselves, expressed concern about the Provost’s process to eliminate what he identified as low-performing minors and certificates,” Price said. “Numerous other faculty have also expressed dismay to Senators. The Provost opted to keep the Faculty Senate uninformed about the development of the process, choosing to leave our Faculty out of the important role they play in oversight of the curriculum.”

Price said the provost’s process “ignored significant data on numerous programs,” such as student enrollment in courses associated with minors and certificates, the time it takes to complete certain programs and obstacles to enrollment in recently created programs, “including the fact that students are typically advised to declare a minor just before applying for graduation.” 

“The Provost originally claimed that the discontinuation was for fiscal reasons, yet has not provided the campus with any data backing up his claim that inactivating these minors or certificates will save the University or its students and taxpayers money,” Price said. “These changes could very well cost students and taxpayers money.” 

She claims the shorter-than-two-year timeframe programs have available to demonstrate acceptable enrollment numbers is at odds with timetables used by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, which allows bachelor’s degrees five years to grow before reviewing them for low performance. The state board does not mandate enrollment thresholds for minors or certificates. The speaker also claimed Sams violated SAP 11.99.99.M0.01, which explains the review process used to inactivate programs at A&M.

According to Price, abiding by the SAP is part of what A&M submits to SACSCOC, a body that accredits institutions of higher education. She also claimed the provost’s office is ignoring the Association of American Universities’ statement on Academic Principles, which advocates for faculty control of curriculum and strong shared governance procedures. 

“As the representative body of our Faculty, The Senate and its EC is deeply concerned for our University and the reputational risk that the Provost’s proposal represents,” Price said. “The EC is concerned that The Board of Regents may not be fully aware of the deeply flawed process and the ramifications of the Provost’s decisions. We do not oppose the concept of a process, but we vehemently oppose the one that was implemented by the Provost with little consideration of the consequences.”

Update: 12:31 p.m. 

Multiple faculty members stepped up during a public testimony segment to speak, beginning with two members of the Women’s and Gender Studies program. Theresa Morris, the program’s director, criticized the resolution and decision to shut down the minor.

“All of the LGBTQ minor curriculum courses are part of an existing curriculum,” Morris said. “The marginal cost of those courses is zero dollars.”

Price stepped forward as well, saying passing the resolution would endanger A&M’s accreditation.

“We’re afraid of knowledge, and that’s not what a leading institution should be,” Price said.

The Faculty Senate’s speaker-elect, Andrew Klein, shared similar accreditation. He said it seems as if the enrollment thresholds were created to explicitly target the LGBTQ studies minor.

Leonard Bright stepped up to oppose the resolution. He alleged outside political influence has taken hold. Approving this resolution, he said, would contribute to growing faculty disapproval.

“This is not how a great educational institution should operate,” Bright said.

Regent Bob Albritton said the resolution was not about eliminating the LGBTQ studies minor. Faculty began laughing at Albritton after he made incorrect statements about the enrollment thresholds.

Update: 12:44 p.m.

The Texas A&M System Board of Regents has passed a resolution mandating President Mark Welsh III “take actions necessary to eliminate” 14 minors and 38 certificates. The decision was met with gasps by faculty.

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