I am
almost speechless regarding the events of this past week. Governor Andrew Cuomo
issued his State of the State Address, which included his plans for
“educational reform”. The Governor, in a
graphic and stunning illustration of the old adage, “politics make strange
bedfellows”, has joined Carl Paladino and his cohorts, who advocate the
“disassembling” of the Buffalo Public Schools; label our children as failures;
demonize our teachers; and champion the myth of the redemptive value of charter
schools.
I have
been writing this column for about six months.
When I started it, I entitled it “Buffalo Schools at the Crossroads” because
I believed that the District had reached a critical juncture. We could go in one direction: movement to develop a reasoned strategic plan,
conceivably including pushback on unfair mandates from the State Education
Department, to correct our problems. Or,
we could take the path advocated by the new Board majority to dismantle our public
education system. Frankly, our best
opportunity to take the road leading to incremental but steady growth in
student achievement was diminished when Dr. Pamela Brown was forced to resign
as Superintendent. Unfortunately it now
appears that we are being pushed down the latter path, thanks to powerful and
moneyed forces that support the “disassemblers”. Robert Bennett, Board of Regents Chancellor
Emeritus, Chancellor Merryl Tisch, local
banker Robert Wilmers, and as noted the Governor are all weighing in on the
urgency of “fixing” Buffalo’s failing schools.
Today, we are at the crossroads as
well as in the crosshairs, referencing the increased targeting of our District
by these powerful and influential detractors.
Now, I’m
not a “whiner”, nor an “apologist”, nor “unrealistic” when it comes to the
Buffalo Schools and the serious problems and challenges that have beset this
district for decades. Unlike that
nameless Board member, who several years ago uttered the words, the “State Education
Department is picking on Buffalo”, I have not made that claim, at least not
publicly until now. But I believe that the District has been the subject of
unfair and overly focused attention as the crucible in which all negative
attributes of “failing” schools are
conjured up for display.
The
District received no credit for positive accomplishment, such as a significant
increase in graduation rates over the last two years and incremental growth in
some of our schools that resulted in their movement to the list of “schools in
good standing”. Also, when have you last
seen any, in depth reporting of the arbitrary changes by the State in cut
scores (those scores that determine pass/fail on the standardized tests) or a
presentation on the merits of those standardized tests, which are used to test
all children regardless of language proficiency or educational ability? Or what about the mandate to send students
from East and Lafayette to BOCES, which resulted in few positive gains for the
students but a gain of nearly $500,000 for BOCES?
As for the
Governor, like Chancellor Tisch, he too is pointing fingers at Buffalo. He agrees with Dr. Tisch in wanting to make
it possible for the State to take over “failing” Districts, like
Buffalo’s. He proposes increasing the
number of charter schools, apparently believing that they have the answers to
resolving our educational problems. He
also is in favor of continuing to use “high stakes” standardized tests. They’re called “high stakes” because they not
only determine student proficiency upon which school success or failure is
based, but he plans to assign a greater significance to the use of these tests
to evaluate teachers and determine employment opportunities, tenure and salary.
“Aaron Pallas of Teachers College says it is unfair to use the
Common Core test scores to gauge achievement because they have a different
passing mark from the previous tests. Only 30% passed the Common Core tests,
but the year before, 80% were passing. The teachers didn't suddenly get worse.
The State Commissioner decided to change the standards.” (Diane Ravitch’s Blog)
And most
disturbing, the Governor calls for breaking “one
of the only remaining public monopolies,” referring to public education, while he’d
increase the number of charter schools but not call for increased
accountability of these privately run, publicly funded institutions. Finally, it appears to make little difference
that Buffalo is listed as the third poorest city in the Nation and that poverty
correlates with student educational success or that New York State has been
named as the most segregated in the Nation exacerbating the poverty impact. We are in the crosshairs and those taking
aim, plan to strip our communities of inclusion/participation in the public
education system.
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