When West Virginia University’s administration proposed nixing the college’s graduate programs in mathematics this summer, resistance to the recommendation cropped up almost instantly.
Critics questioned the rationale behind shutting down the state’s only math Ph.D. program. What would happen to the faculty whose jobs were slated to disappear? And, they wondered, could an institution even be classified as an R1 university without a Ph.D. program in math?
But such concerns didn’t stop West Virginia’s Board of Governors from ultimately cutting the university’s graduate programs in math last month — along with
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