She also gave her strongest signal yet of plans to reorganize the school’s leadership.
“Some of the top academic administrators will be returning to the classroom,” Bryant said, noting there will be a search for a “new team that will redefine and reshape the way we do business at FAMU.”
The announcements were part of an opinion piece sent Thursday to the Tallahassee Democrat. The piece stopped short of providing specifics about who will be returning or which faculty members are not teaching, but Bryant declined to be interviewed Thursday. University spokeswoman LaNedra Carroll said Bryant’s written words were all the information the president would provide at this time.