Texas Tech University to Close Gender, Sexuality Programs
Chancellor Brandon Creighton’s memo said the system will “prioritize [faculty] recruitment in alignment with this memorandum.”
Photo illustration by Justin Morrison/Inside Higher Ed | raclro/iStock/Getty Images | Jason Fochtman/Houston Chronicle/Getty Images
All majors, minors, certificates and graduate degrees that are “centered on” sexual orientation or gender identity must be phased out and canceled, Texas Tech University system chancellor Brandon Creighton told university presidents in a memo Friday. The decree is an escalation of the course content review policies implemented last year and reflects a trend of academic censorship at Texas public institutions.
The memo requires that gender and sexuality content be sorted into one of three groups: content that is “centered on” sexual orientation or gender identity, content that “includes” those topics and content that incidentally references them. Provosts must then review courses and programs that fall into the “centered on” category and recommend them for closure by June 15. Programs earmarked for closure must freeze admissions and begin a teach-out plan for currently enrolled students.
Student self-directed study and faculty research are exempt from the rules, though going forward the system will “prioritize recruitment in alignment with this memorandum.” Instruction required for licensures and instruction on “chromosomal variations, Differences of Sex Development (DSDs), and intersex biological conditions” is still allowed; however, professors who teach on those topics may not use them to “advocate for or validate sociological frameworks of fluid gender identities,” the memo said.
Creighton’s memo also reinforced rules stating that faculty must recognize a strict gender binary and prohibits the “endorsement of a gender spectrum or fluid gender identities as empirical biological science.”
Jen Shelton, an associate professor of English, told The Texas Tribune that the memo feels like a “betrayal.”
“The good news is I think the whole university has been betrayed. I think even the provost did not expect it to look like this, because it’s people from the provost’s office who have been coming to us and saying, ‘Don’t worry. This part is all going to be fine,’” Shelton said.
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