The annual grant program, launched in 2015, provides each Class of 2024 fellow with $15,000 over three years to support academic research or creative work.
Dr. Goforth is one of 21 early-career postdoctoral researchers chosen from among this year’s 500-plus applicants and the first Texas A&M recipient in the 41-year history of the prestigious award.
History graduate Caleb Lenard '13 said his involvement in programs and organizations as a student at Texas A&M helped him land a highly competitive job.
Dr. Xiaowei Chen draws on her expertise in earthquake rupture, induced seismicity and subsurface structure to provide valuable insight into the recent surge of earthquakes in west Texas and possible risk-reduction measures.
Twenty years ago, Dr. Carlos Cantu ‘05 worked with Texas A&M biology professor Dr. Deborah Siegele in her lab. Now, he is honoring her mentorship and fulfilling his promise through a fellowship intended to help graduate students forge their own paths.
The new state-approved Society, Ethics and Law (SEAL) major in the Department of Philosophy is expected to build community as a destination degree with broad appeal for students interested in societal transformation.
Five Texas A&M chemistry graduates have made lead gifts in support of the new West Campus home for all things chemistry and the future of science education in Aggieland — the Instructional Laboratory & Innovative Learning Building.
Dr. Ersen Arseven’s most recent gift honors one of the Department of Statistics’ most prominent former students and faculty members while simultaneously supporting its future faculty excellence.
The addition of Dr. Judy Dickey, Dr. Dan Fu and Dr. Kelly Núñez Ocasio increases the total number of faculty to 24, making Texas A&M's one of the largest atmospheric sciences departments in the United States.
This year, the Susanne M. Glasscock Humanities Book Prize for Interdisciplinary Scholarship will commemorate its 25th anniversary by selecting one of six finalists to receive the $10,000 prize, one of the nation’s largest book prizes.
A new gift from the foundation of the late civil engineer and philanthropist Harry E. Bovay, Jr. to the College of Arts and Sciences will establish a symposium in chemical biology.
As an undergraduate, Luke Soules ’61 was drawn to the acclaimed faculty and challenging academics in the Department of Economics at Texas A&M — two areas he and his family are committed to supporting through their most recent gift to the department.