Last Friday’s announcement that Dr. John B. King, Jr will be
appointed Acting US Secretary of Education has generated much speculation about
what this could mean for the Buffalo Schools.
Both his supporters and critics can envision the positives and negatives
associated with Dr. King’s powerful new role.
And given his prior history with, focus on and knowledge of the
challenges of urban districts, Buffalo as a prime example, one can imagine that
the city schools may receive special attention from the new Secretary.
Contrary to popular belief, however, Buffalo is not unique
in this state or in the country for that matter for the distinction of having a
school district with serious problems. Yet
Dr. King will undoubtedly call on his New York State experience and use Buffalo
and other urban districts (Rochester and Syracuse) as exemplars of his
philosophy of how to fix “failing schools”. He doesn’t officially assume his position
until December. In the meantime, both
his record in New York State and his blueprint for the direction he will take
US SED will be the subjects of further conversation and scrutiny. As for his Buffalo record, let me remind the
readers of a few of Dr. King’s decisions that adversely affected our School
District.
Remember: as the
Commissioner, he made the phrase “building the plane, while flying it”, describing
the implementation of the Common Core and its accompanying high stakes testing
system, the rallying cry for every questionable educational “reform” idea that
is poorly conceived and even more poorly implemented. The
current approach to create Receivership schools is another example of the mentality
that produced the former expression. In
fact it appears that the State Education Department under its present
leadership is continuing to walk in the path(s) built by John King.
Remember: as the
Commissioner, he forced the District to send East and Lafayette High School
students to BOCES for CTE (vocational) programs, many of which are offered in
the District. This unfunded mandate cost
the District nearly $8,000 in tuition for each student (almost double the expense
to offer the same vocational course in the District). The results?
In 2013-14: 33 of 77 (43%)
students sent to BOCES passed their courses.
The following year, 2014-15, 52 of 96 students or 54% were on track to
complete the BOCES classes. In contrast,
the graduation rate for students completing programs in the Buffalo CTE schools
exceeds 86%.
Remember: as the
Commissioner, he appointed Dr. Judy Elliott, in 2012, as the Distinguished
Educator. She was reappointed in 2013 and 2014. She was hired “to assess the learning
environment in the District's Persistently Lowest Achieving and Priority Schools,
serve as ex-officio member of the District’s Board of Education, and review and
make recommendations regarding the plans developed by the District for its
Persistently Lowest Achieving and Priority Schools”. This is another State mandate that cost the
District $110,000 to $120,000 for each year of this consultancy.
During her tenure, Dr. Elliott developed
action plans but it remains to be seen what improvement has resulted from this
work. In fact, given the continued
pressure on the District during her term and impending Receivership, one would
have to conclude that Dr. Elliott has not helped the District to improve its
priority and focus schools. It should
be noted that the evaluation of Dr. Elliott’s performance is the purview of the
Commissioner. However, as with her
appointment the Board has never been consulted regarding her performance. And
to my knowledge, no evaluation has been shared or made public by the
Commissioner. What does this say about
the equity of the State’s accountability standards? Buffalo was used as the testing ground for a
new strategy that didn’t work for us and since no other District in the State
has a DE apparently is not a workable strategy for school improvement anywhere.
A year ago, last December; the picture was very different
for Dr. King. He left the New York State
Education Department for Washington.
Supporters lamented his leaving but there were many opponents who
thought it was time for a change. I
wrote a column at the time and since we’re remembering Dr. King, the
Commissioner of NY SED, here is the concluding paragraph:
Will Dr. King be
missed? Most certainly. Should we be worried? Not in the least. His legacy, not just in
Buffalo but across this state is one of oppressive mandates, seemingly personal
petty politics, failure to dialogue with parents and other stakeholders,
insistence on imposing the Common Core
and incessant standardized testing tied to teacher evaluation and other
“reforms” that have not been
validated. The results, however, have
been detrimental to the educational system statewide. So as Dr. King exits the State Education
Department and the Regents begins a national search, we must be vigilant to
demand that the next Commissioner provide the open, transparent and honest
interaction that has been demanded of us.
As Dr. King takes the reins of his new position, I think the
last sentence could easily apply to him as public education advocates across
this nation will demand accountability, transparency and communication with the
incoming Secretary. I look forward to
Dr. King’s next visit to the Buffalo Public Schools. His dialogue with the Board should be quite
interesting; that is if he meets with all of us.
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