Create a free Diverse: Issues In Higher Education account to continue reading. Already have an account? Enter your email to access the article.

FAMU Restructuring Plan Would Shut Down Numerous Programs

Faced with mounting financial challenges, Florida A&M University President James Ammons announced a major overhaul Monday, proposing to close or merge about two dozen programs, including a large contingent in the College of Education.

Ammons said in a statement on the school’s website that FAMU already has cut more than $30 million since 2007, the year he arrived. The university is facing an additional $13.3 million in projected cuts for the coming fiscal year and the loss of more than $7 million in federal stimulus funds.

Stating that the restructuring plan “is being prompted by anticipated budget cuts,” Ammons said it is also an opportunity for the entire university community to take part in making improvements for the future.

“We will have to make a paradigm shift as we face the fact that some things are more important to us in achieving our goals than others,” Ammons said. “We want to establish a College of Dental Medicine, distance-learning initiatives, and create a new environment for teaching and learning. Since 80 percent of our budget is in personnel, we are going to have to look at every part of the university to determine its relevancy to meeting our future needs.”

Most prominent on Ammons’ seven-page list of program changes were nine proposed program closures in the College of Education at both the bachelor and master’s levels. Among them, the M.S. programs in Adult Education, Secondary Education, English Education, Mathematics Education, Science Education and Social Sciences Education, along with B.S. and M.S. degree programs in Business Education.

Also hard-hit is the College of Arts and Sciences, where bachelor’s programs in Spanish and French would be closed along with the master’s program in school psychology. Music performance and jazz studies would become part of a new B.A. in music program.

Other program terminations are being recommended in the College of Engineering Sciences, Technology and Agriculture (CESTA), the School of Journalism and Graphic Communication—in which the B.S. program in graphic communication would be eliminated—and the M.S. in journalism also would be closed.

The trusted source for all job seekers
We have an extensive variety of listings for both academic and non-academic positions at postsecondary institutions.
Read More
The trusted source for all job seekers