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See the Texas A&M University College of Arts and Sciences news from March 2024 .

The Advancing Discovery to Market program has provided nearly $5 million in funding to create new products from recent innovations or discoveries in its initial year.

Six College of Arts and Sciences faculty and staff are among the university’s 25 recipients of the 2024 Distinguished Achievement Award recognizing exemplary efforts in a variety of categories crucial to campus-wide excellence.

Erukhimova is being honored by the American Association of Physics Teachers for her contributions to undergraduate physics teaching and extraordinary accomplishments in communicating the excitement of physics to her students.

The ceremony formally welcomed the 14 Hagler Institute for Advanced Study Fellows for 2023-24 and two distinguished lecturers — four of whom are being hosted by or affiliated with Texas A&M Arts and Sciences.

The four-time Grammy Award winner and Texas A&M languages/journalism graduate shared his perspective on making the most of one’s college experience and the many opportunities that abound in Aggieland.

Debra '79 and Michael Dishberger '79 met in their first days as students at Texas A&M in fall 1975. Nearly five decades and 44 years of marriage later, they have created their third endowment in the College of Arts and Sciences to help future undergraduate and graduate students pursue their own education-related dreams.

Undergraduate students in the Departments of Atmospheric Sciences and Geography explored the urban heat island effect in Munich and other weather-related phenomena across Germany, Austria and Italy during a two-week European study abroad trip last May.

The College of Arts and Sciences hosted its first-ever Outstanding Former Student Spring Awards Banquet on February 29 to honor six outstanding alumni as well as provide an opportunity for scholarship and fellowship recipients to meet and recognize their generous donors.

A team of Texas A&M students gained insight into global diplomacy and broadened their perspectives at the Model Arab League Conference in Houston.

A celebration of life will be held on April 21 for the longtime and widely respected economist who was recruited to Texas A&M in 1968 as a full professor and helped shape U.S. monetary policy as well as both Social Security and Medicare.

Each year, undergraduate students in the Texas A&M Department of Oceanography gain professional experience through research cruises.

More than 165 Texas A&M economics majors took advantage of the invaluable opportunity to interact with representatives from 16 prominent companies and learn more about student organizations within the department.

A poster on Texas A&M student-led research analyzing the urban heat island effect in Munich, Germany, was one of 13 recognized with awards among the approximately 275 total student posters presented at the 23rd Annual Student Conference of the American Meteorological Society.

Texas A&M History’s Dr. Sarah McNamara has been recognized with the Sara A. Whaley Book Prize for her monograph on women and labor.

The San Angelo native who earned a degree in English from Texas A&M has gone on to dozens of series and film roles, plus one “royal” wedding.

A Texas A&M team's recent recovery of a Slocum buoyancy glider from the depths of the Gulf of Mexico marked a rare feat in marine research and another accomplishment in a proud tradition of Texas A&M-led ocean observation and analysis.

Wright, a leader in ocean data science who earned her master’s of science in oceanography from Texas A&M in 1986, is one of four distinguished scientists comprising the first all-female cohort in the history of the prestigious program.

Texas A&M chemical engineering major Juan Guio's faculty-led student research in the Department of Chemistry focused on exploring increased efficiency in photovoltaics.

Liu is one of 50 mathematicians across the U.S. and Canada selected to receive 2024 Simons Foundation fellowships, a coveted award intended to support distinguished scientists in their research pursuits.

Dr. Sonia Hernández has earned a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to research and write a book on the 1901 lynching attempt of Mexican migrant Gregorio Cortez.

Chemistry Ph.D. candidate Madison Edwards ’25 and 2023 chemistry Ph.D. graduate Dr. Kunyu Wang are among this year’s 35 international Ph.D. and postdoctoral students representing 13 countries who were chosen for the elite scientific leadership immersion opportunity.