May 6, 2025 (The Minneapolis Star Tribune) –
Officials from
Mankato previously offered a total of 306 degrees and certificates, but beginning next fall, that portfolio will include just 216, a number school officials said is comparable to what other universities in the Minnesota State system provide.
“There wasn’t much for me to choose from [when signing up for classes next semester],” said junior
The bachelor of arts degree will still be available, a common occurrence with many of the undergraduate cuts where two degrees were offered.
“It became clear that 80% of our students were enrolled in 20% of our programs,” President
Disciplines on the chopping block include French, German, art history, music and international business among baccalaureate degrees. The school is also eliminating master’s degrees in French, Spanish, theater arts, engineering, gender and women’s studies and mathematics education.
Among certificates at the undergraduate and graduate level, renewable energy, critical thinking, gender and women’s studies and culturally responsive teaching are being axed.
The new total includes 12 new offerings in areas like public health, artificial intelligence and public policy.
The university cycles through a process of “strategic budget planning” every three years, Inch said, with the last cuts in 2022. But he said he can’t recall a time in Mankato’s past when this amount of paring was done.
“I’m a big fan of French and German, but if students don’t find relevance in the program and choose not to enroll in it ... it doesn’t really matter,” Inch said. “The question with any of these that I’ve asked is, can you retool in a way that will draw students?”
The university will offer all current students the chance to have their program “taught out” by faculty. Incoming students with intentions to major in the cut programs will have “personalized advising appointments” to walk through options. Faculty layoffs could still happen, he said, but more likely the changes made will influence future hiring decisions.
The edits will save about
Subjects like health sciences and engineering are in demand, he said, adding that he was surprised at the degree of cuts in the arts and humanities. Cutting high-quality programs that aren’t attracting enough students is always the hardest, Inch said.
“There were tears yesterday and I get it, because those are really hard,” he said.
The cuts weren’t just about money, Inch said, adding that some programs were kept “because universities ought to have them, or they serve an important reputational factor, [and] they serve the community,” he said.
An example is the Indigenous studies degree, which has lower enrollment but is an important part of people’s lives and history in the
Minnesota State institutions make programmatic adjustments all the time, said
“Now, there’s no opportunity that we know of,” she said.
Harrison said at a time when gender and sexuality issues are under attack nationally, she and her colleagues “don’t want to step away” from teaching about them. There are 12 students in the master’s programs now, and admittance has been steady.
The graduate programs’ suspension “is quite devastating,” said
“We feel so gutted,” Bevacqua said.
He noted that the cuts come as higher education is being devalued across the country, with the humanities specifically a target.
“The university shouldn’t be thought of as you have these separate programs,” Haque said. “It’s an ecosystem.”
He’s lucky that little will change in his department when compared with others. But the cuts impact faculty morale and could mean fewer students enroll in
“We’re worried about the students looking at the university and the programs [asking], ‘What’s wrong here that they’re cutting programs?’” Haque said.
The changes are a mixed bag for his department, said
In contrast, Slocum said, his music department colleagues are “shell-shocked” to be losing their bachelor of arts degree, the only undergraduate one offered.
“[The cuts] are something we can live with for the greater good of the university,” he said.
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