Bruce Baker has written an illuminating and disturbing post about how New York is underfunding its highest-need schools.
Governor Cuomo likes to complain that the state spends far too much on education but sees little improvement. Baker demonstrates that the formula hurts the neediest students. The governor goes on to say that he will take money away from those districts if their teacher evaluations are poor. In effect, he is punishing them for enrolling students with high needs and threatening to make things worse.
Here is a small part of this very disturbing analysis of how New York State cheats and punishes the poorest districts:
“Riding the national, Duncanian wave of new normalcy (which I’ve come to learn is an extreme form of innumeracy) & reformyness, the only possible cause of lagging achievement in New York State is bad teachers –greedy overpaid teachers with fat pensions – and protectionist unions who won’t let us fire them. Clearly, the lagging state of performance in low income and minority districts in New York State has absolutely nothing at all to do with lack of financial resources under the low-balled aid formula that the state has chosen to not even half fund for the past 5 years? Nah… that couldn’t have anything to do with it. Besides, money certainly has nothing to do with providing decent working conditions and pay which might leveraged to recruit and retain teachers.
“And we all know that if New York State’s average per pupil spending is high, or so the Gov proclaims, then spending clearly must be high enough in each and every-one of the state’s high need districts! (right… because averages always represent what everyone has and needs, right? Reformy innumeracy rears its ugly head again!).
“So it absolutely has to be the fact that no teacher in NY has ever been evaluated at all, or fired for being bad even though we know for sure that at least half of them stink. The obvious solution is that they must be evaluated by egregiously flawed metrics – and we must ram those metrics down their throats.
“In fact, the New York legislature and Governor even found it appropriate to hold hostage additional state aid if districts don’t adopt teacher evaluation plans compliant with the state’s own warped demands and ill-conceived policy framework.
“As I understand it, legislation passed this past year actually tied receipt of state general aid to compliance with the state teacher evaluation mandate. That, in order to receive any increase in state general/foundation aid over prior year, a districts would have to file and have accepted their teacher evaluation plan.
“That’s it – we’ll take away their general state aid – their foundation aid – the aid they are supposed to be getting in order to comply with that court order of several years back. The aid they are constitutionally guaranteed under that order. I’m having some trouble accepting the supposed constitutional authority of a state legislature and governor to cut back general aid on this basis – where they’ve already failed to provide most of the aid they themselves identified as constitutionally adequate under court order? But I guess that’s for the New York Court system to decide.
“If nothing else, it is thoroughly obnoxious, arbitrary and capricious and grossly inequitable treatment. I hear the reformers (who understand neither math nor school finance) whine… But why… why is it inequitable to require similarly that poor and rich districts follow state teacher and principal evaluation guidelines. Setting aside the junk nature of that evaluation system and the bogus measures on which it rests (and the fact that the reformers’ fav-fab-charters have largely rightfully ignored the eval mandate), it is inequitable because districts serving higher poverty children stand to lose more money per child as a result of non-compliance. And they’ve already been squeezed.”

Bruce Baker’s methodical research debunking the truisms of so-called reformers is invaluable, yet I wonder about his reference to innumeracy as the basis for school funding inequities. It suggests the old saw of, “Don’t attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by incompetence.” Perhaps that is so.
Nevertheless, over how many decades and through how many iterations are these savage inequalities – with their devastating effects on children and communities, and which are now used as a pretext for attacking teachers and the very idea of universal public education – going to be seen as some kind of incidental outcome based on well-meaning mistakes, rather than the product and process of class and race- based antagonisms that infuse US history?
How many similarities must be documented before a pattern is named, and motives revealed by pointing out the beneficiaries of all this? Cui bono?
Will it ever be permissible to ask where the incompetence ends and the class and race-based malice begins?
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Michael,
It is still very difficult for those in “our world” to think that these “cui bono” people exist in Education. That there are humans that only think of our children as “assets”. Yet, we have seen the billionaire capitalists take over and destroy companies for a profit. We have seen them exploit child labor (and their safety) in other countries for a profit. We have the Waltons and Murdocks that will use any means to generate a profit!
In “their world”, starting a new business is risky, many fail early on and they take a loss. In the Education business, there is no loss (of monies)! They can start a new Education business (school), have it payed for by taxpayers and collect their profits. If it is not profitable enough or should (after many years usually around 5) the State shut them down, they can simply move on (with no loss of monies) and start up somewhere else. It is a win-win for THEM!
The hedge-funds love this as you have seen in previous posts. The capitalists can grant monies to their business (school) take the tax benefits and keep the monies.
Sick!
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Finally- yes, it’s all true and worse- much, much worse. There are approximately 40 districts in NYS that have zero fund balances- having been encouraged to spend them down to weather the state fiscal crisis- that will be unable to meet financial and educational obligations next year. Within one more year, that number swells to nearly one third of the districts IN THE ENTIRE STATE- 200 to 300. The concern is highest in the North Country Region, where our schools are nearly all rural, high needs, and least suited to regionalization and mergers. Our Governor fiddles while we burn- all the political strength in the state is centered around 9 Long Island senators, so what happens elsewhere is of no consequence for him, as evidenced by the odious “shares” agreement. Please, please continue to bring light to this- publicity is truly our only hope. Thank you!!! Fairfundingforstudents.org
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Thanks for this. Wasn’t aware of this blog.
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Well said. Andrew Cuomo is clearly a beast when it comes to public education. His mother, a teacher advocate, does not agree with NYS ed. policies. What Diane is bringing to our attention is “Systemic Racism”. Prevalent also in the 1990’s when I first began teaching in NYC.
NYS is bankrupt due to incompetence and criminality in government agencies in Albany preceeding Andrew Cuomo henceforth his aggressive hunger for money at the expense of our youth. His treatment of teachers and students is equivalent to Adam Lanza’s fusillade, only in a burocratic form.
fusillade (a pt. of vieCuomo’s teacher of
excellence genocide and perpetrati
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Please Diane, keep this diologue alive as the failure and corruption needs to be taken on by your intelligence. I have tried to work with Assemblywoman Galef and Senator Ball regarding multiple errors in NYS Ed. Dept. which is so incompetent it keeps out great teachers, but the states politicians do nothing to help. Henceforth empowering Andrew Cuomo’s “Genocide of Excellent Teachers”. I believe he and Bloomberg are tied in our state for amount of damage and abuse created to public education.
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In addition Dick Ianuzzi, president of NYSUT, has not taken a strong position against Cuomo’s bogus teacher evaluations! They charge $1,000 per year in union dues and what do educators get in return? Dick with no balls!
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