‘Devastating’: Texas A&M Eliminates Women’s and Gender Studies Degree Program

University leaders also said six courses were canceled, and 48 exceptions were granted under new rules on race and gender.

Texas A&M students and faculty gather to support academic freedom in College Station, on Jan. 29, 2026. In late 2025, the university system approved a policy to restrict faculty from advocating race and gender ideology. (Houston Chronicle / Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images)

Originally published by The Texas Tribune.

Texas A&M University announced it is eliminating its women’s and gender studies degree program.

University leaders made the announcement alongside the results of a campus-wide course review launched after a video of a student confronting a professor over gender identity content went viral last fall and sparked political backlash.

Interim president Tommy Williams made the decision because of low enrollment and cost, College of Arts and Sciences interim dean Simon North and senior executive associate Cynthia Werner said in an email to faculty obtained by The Texas Tribune.

“We know this is devastating news,” the administrators said. “One of the primary duties of university administrators is to be good stewards of public money. Even the smallest programs require ongoing investment in faculty time, staff support, and administrative oversight.”

Texas A&M offered a bachelor of arts degree, a bachelor of science degree, an undergraduate minor and a graduate certificate in women’s and gender studies. The program has 25 students seeking a major and 31 seeking a minor. Students already enrolled will be allowed to complete their programs over the next six semesters, but no new students will be accepted.

We have to keep fighting and standing up for our students’ right to have an education that is critical for the times they live in.

Chaitanya Lakkimsetti, an associate professor of sociology

Women’s and gender studies at Texas A&M is an interdisciplinary program rather than an academic department and does not have tenure-line faculty, relying instead on professors from other departments to teach its courses.

Chaitanya Lakkimsetti, an associate professor of sociology who has long taught in the women’s and gender studies program, said it served as one of the few spaces on campus bringing students and faculty together from across disciplines. She said she met an English professor through the program, a connection that eventually led to a book they wrote on the #MeToo movement.

She said she taught a feminist theory graduate seminar last spring that enrolled 15 students from multiple departments, an unusually high number for a graduate course.

Lakkimsetti said she was saddened the program would no longer exist as a space for that kind of collaboration.

“We have to keep fighting and standing up for our students’ right to have an education that is critical for the times they live in,” she said.

The cancellations and the exemptions are just the tip of the iceberg.

Leonard Bright, president, Texas A&M chapter of the American Association of University Professors

After last fall’s controversy, the Texas A&M University System Board of Regents passed a policy restricting how race and gender could be discussed in class and ordered a sweeping review of course offerings. Specifically, faculty may not advocate “race or gender ideology” or topics related to sexual orientation or gender identity unless a campus president grants a written exception for certain non-core or graduate-level courses that serve a necessary or educational purpose. System officials have not defined what qualifies as a necessary educational purpose.

University officials said Friday they examined 5,400 course syllabi for the spring semester and canceled six courses, or about 0.11 percent of courses offered. Officials said academic advisers ensured the cancellations did not disrupt students’ progress toward graduation. 

Faculty leaders disputed that framing. Leonard Bright, president of the Texas A&M chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said the six-course figure reflects only the most visible outcomes of the review and understates its impact. 

Bright, whose own ethics course was canceled earlier this month under the same policy, said many faculty changed syllabi or removed material to avoid scrutiny.

“The cancellations and the exemptions are just the tip of the iceberg,” Bright said.

‘Devastating’: Texas A&M Eliminates Women’s and Gender Studies Degree Program
Brian Evans, president of the Texas Conference American Association of University Professors, speaks as Texas A&M students and faculty gather at Texas A&M University in College Station, on Jan. 29, 2026. (Jason Fochtman / Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

The university confirmed that the six-course total announced Friday does not include courses that faculty revised or altered earlier in the review process.

North told faculty that roughly 200 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences had been identified as potentially affected by the policy, with some classes canceled, renumbered or altered before the spring semester began.

The canceled courses the university announced Friday were spread across the Bush School of Government and Public Service and the colleges of Arts and Sciences, Agriculture and Life Sciences, and Education and Human Development. 

The university later identified canceled courses as “Introduction to Race and Ethnicity”; “Religions of the World”; “Ethics in Public Policy”; “Diversity in Sport Organizations”; “Cultural Leadership and Exploration for Society”; and “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Youth Development Organizations.” All six were undergraduate courses.

Officials said the bulk of the course content review was performed by faculty and their department heads, who altered hundreds of syllabi. Deans forwarded 54 courses to the president and provost for final review. The president granted 48 exceptions.

Texas A&M has made similar cuts in recent years. In 2024, regents voted to eliminate dozens of low-enrollment minors and certificates, including an LGBTQ+ studies minor, a decision faculty said was made in response to conservative criticism and with limited faculty input.

Regents are expected to hear a presentation Thursday on low-performing academic programs across the system’s 12 campuses, according to an agenda for its quarterly meeting.

PEN America, a national advocate for freedom of expression, criticized the decision Friday, saying Texas A&M is “running roughshod over academic freedom.”

“Forcing faculty to restrict what they teach censors the knowledge accessible to students,” said Amy Reid, program director for Freedom to Learn at PEN America. “Limiting what can be taught in a university classroom is not education, it’s ideological control.”


The Texas Tribune partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage.

Disclosure: Texas A&M University has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


Ms. Classroom wants to hear from educators and students being impacted by legislation attacking public education, higher education, gender, race and sexuality studies, activism and social justice in education, and diversity, equity and inclusion programs for our series, ‘Banned! Voices from the Classroom.’ Submit pitches and/or op-eds and reflections (between 500-800 words) to Ms. contributing editor Aviva Dove-Viebahn at adove-viebahn@msmagazine.com. Posts will be accepted on a rolling basis.

Great Job Jessica Priest, The Texas Tribune & the Team @ Ms. Magazine for sharing this story.

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NBTX NEWS is a local, independent news source focused on New Braunfels, Comal County, and the surrounding Hill Country. It exists to keep people informed about what is happening in their community, especially the stories that shape daily life but often go underreported. Local government decisions, civic actions, education, public safety, development, culture, and community voices are at the center of its coverage. NBTX NEWS is for people who want clear information without spin, clickbait, or national talking points forced onto local issues. It prioritizes accuracy, transparency, and context so readers can understand not just what happened, but why it matters here. The goal is simple: strengthen local awareness, support informed civic participation, and make sure community stories are documented, accessible, and treated with care.

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