Texas A&M International University

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Texas A&M International University
Established 1969
Type State university
President Ray Keck III, Ph.D.
Academic staff 192 Full-time (Fall 2011)
Students

7,408 (Fall 2013)

7,173 (Fall 2012)[1]
Location Laredo, Texas, United States
Campus 300 acres (1.2 km²)
Nickname Dustdevils
Website http://www.tamiu.edu/

Texas A&M International University, often referred to as TAMIU, is a public, co-educational, state-supported university located in Laredo, Texas. It is a member institution of The Texas A&M University System.

History

  • 1969: Established as a branch of Texas A&I University at Kingsville, and named Texas A&I University at Laredo, functioning as an upper-level University for juniors, seniors, and graduate students. The Senate bill was introduced by Wayne Connally, brother of Governor John B. Connally, Jr.
  • 1977: University's name changes to Laredo State University.
  • 1989: University joins The Texas A&M University System.
  • 1993: Name changes to Texas A&M International University.
  • 1995: An unsuccessful attempt is made to transfer TAMIU to the University of Texas System. TAMIU becomes a four-year University, welcomes its first freshman class and opens its new campus, the first new University campus constructed in Texas in over 25 years.
  • 2001: Ray Keck III succeeds J. Charles Jennett as university president.
  • 2004: Doctoral program in International Business Administration is launched.
  • 2006: Early College High School joins TAMIU (in collaboration with Laredo Independent School District).
  • 2009: 40th Anniversary Celebration (2009-2010) begins.
  • 2010: Dedicates Autism Interventions Center.
  • 2010: Dedicates new University Success Center.
  • 2011: Dining Center Expansion in Student Center opens.
  • 2012: With the approval of The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents, the University Success Center is renamed the Senator Judith Zaffirini Student Success Center. Formal dedication ceremonies are scheduled in September 2012.

Academics

Texas A&M International University offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral degrees through five colleges. They include:

  • College of Arts and Sciences
  • A. R. Sanchez, Jr. School of Business
  • College of Education
  • College of Nursing and Health Sciences

About TAMIU

Texas A&M International University (TAMIU) is a Member of The Texas A&M University System and has a $160 million cutting-edge campus on a 300-acre (1.2 km2) site in Laredo, Texas. The newest University in the State of Texas, TAMIU offers over 70 undergraduate, graduate or doctoral degrees in the arts and sciences, business administration, and nursing. The A.R. Sánchez, Jr. School of Business was named one of the “Best 296 Business Schools” by The Princeton Review and ranked in the Top Ten for offering the greatest opportunity for minority students. The Sánchez School of Business offers a doctoral degree in international business.

TAMIU was ranked by U.S. News & World Report in its “2012 Best Colleges Rankings.” The Texas Higher Education Journal named TAMIU the State’s No. 1 public institution of higher education producer of degrees for Latinos in 2011. CNN Money.com named TAMIU one of its 10 most affordable colleges in the U.S. in 2011. U.S. Department of Ed research shows that among public, four-year or above universities, TAMIU has one of the nation’s lowest net prices in 2012. TAMIU received the “Military Friendly School” designation by G.I. Jobs, a magazine for military personnel transitioning into civilian life, in 2011. Since 2010, TAMIU Study Abroad Programs participants have logged over 1.3 million miles and visited over 30 countries. In 2012, TAMIU awarded $2.92 million in scholarships to assist hundreds of Laredo high school graduates. TAMIU’s 18,000+ alumni are all over the world and just around the corner. 85% of TAMIU 2011 seniors said they’d choose TAMIU again if starting college again.

TAMIU programs focus on developing strong undergraduate and graduate offerings with a progressive agenda for global study and understanding across disciplines. The most popular undergraduate majors are business administration, criminal justice, nursing, biology and communication disorders.

The top graduate majors are business administration, educational administration, counseling psychology, school counseling and accounting. Of graduate students, 64% hold undergraduate degrees from TAMIU.

The Fall 2013 enrollment is 7,408, an increase of 3.28 percent from the 2012 fall total of 7,173.[1] Full-time faculty number 192. The professor/student ratio is 1:21. More than 90 percent of the students are Hispanic; 3 percent are international students. Some 11.5 percent of students live on campus. TAMIU has aggressive financial aid and Study Abroad programs. Recently TAMIU has implemented a campus Common Read program featuring books by Gerda Weissmann Klein, Ishmael Beah, Somaly Mam and Steve Reifenberg. As part of the Read, students have traveled to Poland, Ghana, Cambodia and Chile.

Accreditations

Texas A&M International University is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees. The undergraduate and graduate programs in the College of Business Administration are accredited by AACSB International - The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business. The College of Nursing and Health Sciences' Dr. F.M. Canseco School of Nursing is accredited by the Texas Board of Nurse Examiners and the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission. Texas A&M International University is also accredited by the Texas Education Agency. Texas A&M International University is a member of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education, the American Council on Education and the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.

Rankings

TAMIU's A. R. Sanchez Jr. School of Business ranks as the second best in the country for providing the "Greatest Opportunity for Minority Students."[2] As of 2010, the A.R. Sanchez Jr. School of Business doctoral degree in International Business is the only fully locally-offered (non-collaborative) doctoral degree offered by the University.

The Princeton Review named the A.R. Sanchez The School of Business a “Best Business School” in its 2006 and 2008 editions. The 2008 edition of The Princeton Review also listed the School as a Top Ten for Business Schools offering the greatest opportunity for minority students.

In 2013, the National Council on Teacher Quality, based in Washington, D.C., ranked TAMIU subpar in the matriculation of its education majors, of which there were some seven hundred graduates between 2009 and 2012. The institution received 2.5 on an 8.0 ranking system, or 1.5 for its elementary program and 1.0 for the secondary studies. TAMIU provides the majority of public school teachers to the two systems in Webb County. The programs were evaluated based on rigor, selectivity, and the level of mentorship provided to prospective educators.[3]

TAMIU officials questioned the motive, methodology, and results of the study. University officials released a statement: "TAMIU joins other teacher-training programs from colleges of education across the nation in challenging the accuracy of NCTQ results that incorporate inaccurate data and inherently flawed research methodology."[4] The NCTQ was founded in 2000 by the conservative think tank, the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. TAMIU suggested that the NCTQ favors the dismantling of university teacher education programs with "bargain-basement on-line programs, some of which are directed by NCTQ surrogates."[4]TAMIU questioned why no NCTQ researcher visited the campus but instead based its evaluation on information sent primarily to the Washington office via emails.[4]

The TAMIU program was placed on probation in February 2013 by the Texas Board of Educator Certification. Though 70 percent of the TAMIU education graduates passed the certification examination, state accountability standards require an 80 percent completion rate to avoid the probationary status.[4]TAMIU President Ray Keck noted that Texas Tech, Rutgers, Syracuse, and Stanford universities all fared poorly in the NCTQ study as well and asked, "Do you honestly believe those universities run slipshod programs in education?"[4]

Research

TAMIU is home to various research centers, including the Binational Center, Center for the Study of Western Hemispheric Trade, The Western Hemispheric Trade Information Center, the Texas Center for Border Economics and Enterprise Development, the Small Business Development Center and the Center for Earth and Environmental Studies.

One of the institution's largest private benefactors was Radcliffe Killam (1910-2007), a Laredo oilman who donated $2 million to establish The Center for Western Hemispheric Trade, in addition to the University's 300-acre (1.2 km2) campus land. Killam and his wife, the former Sue Spivey, were honored by TAMIU with honorary doctorates and the naming of the Radcliffe and Sue Killam Library.

Athletics

TAMIU's 11 sports teams are known as the Dustdevils and compete in the Heartland Conference. They became active members of NCAA Division II on September 1, 2008. As an active member, TAMIU is eligible for conference championships and NCAA tournament berths.[5]

TAMIU participates in the following sports:

  • Baseball
  • Men's Basketball (2010 Heartland Conference Tournament Championship)
  • Women's Basketball
  • Cross Country
  • Men's Golf
  • Women's Golf
  • Men's Soccer (2003 Red River Athletic Conference Champions, 2010 Heartland Conference Title)
  • Women's Soccer
  • Women's Volleyball (2002 West Division Athletics Conference Champions)
  • Softball (2010 Heartland Conference Tournament Championship)

Increase in student fees, 2011

Student fees at TAMIU increased by 7 percent in the 2011-2012 academic year. A 30 semester-hour course load increased in costs from $6,133 to $6,588, or $425. The additional fees were earmarked for library, parking, technology access, energy costs, athletics, graduate application fees, and a new student scholarship program.

In 2011-2012, TAMIU had the 11th-lowest tuition rate among public four-year universities in Texas, according to the United States Department of Education. After considering scholarships and grants, for which 95 percent of the students can qualify, TAMIU is ranked the fourth-most affordable university in Texas.[6]

Notable alumni

Notable faculty

  • Kamal Dean Parhizgar, author of multiple books and journal articles on business ethics

Gallery

External links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Cody Permenter, "Fewer Students: Stats: LCC's enrollment figures show drop of 1,300 in 5 years", [TAMIU up 3.28 percent over 2012] Laredo Morning Times, October 22, 2013, p. 1
  2. "Best 282 Business Schools". The Princeton Review. Archived from the original on 2006-12-12. Retrieved 2007-01-06. 
  3. JJ Velasquez, "Study slams TAMIU: Grads not prepared to teach", Laredo Morning Times, June 19, 2013, pp. 1, 14A
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 JJ Velasquez, "Study challenged: TAMIU responds to teacher preparation issue", Laredo Morning Times, June 20, 2013, p. 1
  5. "TAMIU Athletics Granted Active NCAA Division II Status". 
  6. JJ Velasquez, "Paying Tuition: Statistics: TAMIU, LCC easier to pay for", Laredo Morning Times, July 15, 2013, pp. 1, 12A

Coordinates: 27°34′22″N 99°26′07″W / 27.5727°N 99.4353°W / 27.5727; -99.4353

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