Steve Cohen, superintendent of schools in Shoreham-Wading River (NY), wrote a column in Ling Island newspapers criticizing the state’s heavy-handed method of mandating change.
For his courage in speaking truth to power, I add Superintendent Steve Cohen to the blig’s honor roll.
Cohen points to a letter from Merryl Tisch, chancellor of the Néw York State Board of Regents, to Governor Cuomo’s representative, outlining her goals.
He writes:
“What’s striking in Ms. Tisch’s recommendations to the governor is the unstated proposition that there is a big difference between public education and state education, and that state education is far superior. From the chancellor’s point of view, public education hasn’t just failed poor, black and Hispanic children the most, but has somehow even failed kids in Great Neck, Jericho, Scarsdale and Garden City — even though many of them go on to the best universities in the nation.
“The remedy? State education.
“Public education is an old and very familiar institution. To be sure, school districts get their authority from New York State. But despite state guidance, school boards, and the administrators and teachers who work for these boards, have broad latitude to define curriculum and instruction.
“These boards and the superintendents they hire have authority over hiring and evaluating teachers and principals. The boards have a duty to propose a spending plan every year to district voters. Public education, in short, means “local control.”
“Public education is democracy in action. It has all the virtues and vices of our form of self-government. This democratic system has worked well in many districts, especially in those whose residents are relatively wealthy and thus able to afford the resources commonly found in thriving schools.
“But in poorer districts, and especially in large cities, democratic “local” control of education has not worked as well as we would all wish. The state Legislature has wrestled with this problem for generations and, in fact, is now under a Court of Appeals order to address fiscal inequities among districts.
“Public education is a complex, immense, difficult institution. Poverty and wealth more than anything tend to determine the outcome of its efforts.
“But it’s also among our most democratic institutions.
“Ms. Tisch, most of her non-elected colleagues and our current governor, however, seem to have arrived at the conclusion that local control of education does not, and cannot, work.”
“Now comes the chancellor’s suggestions that locally elected school boards should no longer have control over determining whether teachers and principals do a good job and that all teachers and principals who do not meet the state’s standard of successful teaching or supervising two years in a row must lose their jobs.
“Chancellor Tisch suggests that the content all children must learn and the methods teachers must use to teach that content will be determined by the state, not local residents in accord with professional educators, acting through democratically elected school board members. She suggests that charter schools, over which local residents have little if any control, would be completely free to flourish (or not!) and to replace democratically run local schools….
“So the non-elected chancellor and the current governor believe local control of education has failed. The great experiment is dead. What will take its place is a technocratic process so complex that it is almost impossible for parents, residents and educators to understand — much less embrace.”

Isn’t this their goal? Keep them confused and keep them controlled.
“So the non-elected chancellor and the current governor believe local control of education has failed. The great experiment is dead. What will take its place is a technocratic process so complex that it is almost impossible for parents, residents and educators to understand — much less embrace.”
Andrew and the Magic pill: a moral dilemna!
A pill may cure 5% of a population’s ailment. It is untested and is known for severe side effects. Scientists have warned that for the other 95% it will cause paralysis, loss of vision and hearing, and in perhaps death. The authorities decide to use it anyway. The magic pill kills far more than it cures. Funeral parlors rejoice.
The governor thinks his one size fits all “pill” will “cure” the very different 728 public school districts, 4817 public schools, 2.7M public school students, and 209.5k public school teachers in the state. Does he honestly believe it will cure them whether or not they have a disease, or is this more about the vengeful death of the 106 NYSUT locals in NYS?
Governor Cuomo wants to use his magic education pill that may cure less than 5% of the problems in education in NYS, but expert after expert has told him of its horrible side effects to the other 95%. He uses it anyway. Corporate profiteers rejoice!
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Hello? I’m sorry, but “To be sure, school districts get their authority from New York State.” They do not. They get their authority from the public, the citizens in district. School “districts” preceded any state authority to establish such. Local communities built schools, hired teachers and were pretty much on their own for a great deal of time. The state’s role is not as a granter of authority but as a guarantor of equal treatment under the law and and finally as a funder to equalize educational opportunity. Most schools are paid for out of local taxes (property or otherwise). Letting the states be the primary funder of public education would give a great deal of central control and that, in general, has only happened at the post-secondary level.
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I think the idea is any power that municipalities have, and by extension the authority of the institutions municipalities create, flows from the state, in one form or another.
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Over my 40+ years in education…at all levels…I’ve had the opportunity to work with perhaps 15 different State Departments of Education. If we are entrusting these institutions to deliver exemplary education…or even marginal education…we are in for a huge shock. There are many functions they can perform admirably; most of them bureaucratic in nature. They know little about pedagogy, little about research, and little about the local happenings in school districts. The one thing they do know is politics and how to shuffle papers to make sure it appears as if they serve some meaningful role in the education of children and young adults.
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Hitler did something similar when he came to power in Germany. Before the people had time to think, he made himself leader for life.
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“Rooting out Democracy”
Public education
Democracy in action
Demands eradication
By oligarchic faction
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This is awesome! You obviously had a great english teacher at one time!
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I had many great English teachers — at Ithaca High School in NY, a public high school.
But that was before public schools went down the tubes, which, if reformalarmism is any indication, must have begun some time in the early 90’s and really taken a dive in the last few years 🙂
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I should say that I had excellent English and language arts teachers all along the way (all in Ithaca public school) not just in high school.
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Woo-hoo, SomeDAM, shout out for the Little Red!
“Ithaca, Ten Square Miles Surrounded by Reality” . . .
. . . and Republicans. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. : )
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It’s also a co-opting of local property tax dollars.
If you force ANY charter period into a district and/or remove all hiring ability for districts so they can’t function, you have taken away local control of property tax money.
This isn’t just about the state’s contribution to public education – by doing this, they not only gain access to state coffers, they gain access rich community property tax coffers as well – like it or not.
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This seems like a BIT of an over-reach, turning the entire state into a “recovery district”.
Good to see they learned absolutely nothing from the disastrous roll-out of Common Core. The hubris may be incurable. It may be baked in. They do this over and over.
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Because, the fake reformers are fanatics. Their goal has nothing to do with improving education. They are not education fanatics. They are Milton Friedman fanatics who believe greed is good because their god said so, and he has a 1976 Nobel Prize in Economic Science to prove he’s right. These fanatics are driving hard toward one goal. To make the world over into what Friedman preached it should be. Heil Friedman, and may he never rest in peace.
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I think this is the elephant in the room in ed reform:
“They would rather rely on people whom they regard as smart and well-connected — whether or not they know anything about schooling — rather than on parents, residents, experienced educators, scholars and students.”
You read this expressed many ways; they don’t “listen”, they don’t “respect”, they “ignore”, but it’s a real problem and I think it’s grounded in ed reformers’ absolute belief that the people who work in and run public schools aren’t very smart. That’s where it comes from.
A hugely diverse group of people all over the country can’t all have the same basic complaint about ed reformers without it having some validity. This complaint is REALLY consistent. Again and again and again, slightly different language, same theme.
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“A hugely diverse group of people all over the country can’t all have the same basic complaint about ed reformers without it having some validity.”
>The same thing could be said of Hitler’s solution that killed millions in the death camps.
> The same thing could be said for Mao’s decade long Cultural Revolution in China that turned upside down the lives of hundreds of millions of Chinese and led to the deaths of millions.
History repeats itself. Just because a diverse group of fools is saying this all across the country doesn’t make it true—-in fact, it isn’t true and there is a lot of evidence to prove what I just wrote is in fact correct.
I think that the U.S. has/had the best public education system in the world and now it is being dismantled by people with too much money, power and stupid, foolish ignorance.
I also don’t think it is a “hugely” diverse group of people all over the country that say this.
I think what we hear is propaganda paid for by Bill Gates, the Walton family, and Eli Broad so we are hearing it repeatedly from a few people—-for instance Governor Cuomo, Eva Moskowitz, and Michelle Rhee. Hundreds of millions of dollars spent every year to promote this message is a HUGE amount of money but not a HUGE number of people.
When Gallup runs it annual survey on public opinion of the public schools, the results reveal that 64%—or more—of parents have trust and confidence in teachers and 35% don’t.
64% is HUGE compared to 35%
When 61% of Americans oppose using student test results in teacher evaluations while 38% favor it
62% is HUGE compared to 38%
When 98% of Americans want to help teachers improve their ability to teach and 1% don’t, 98% is more than HUGE, it is gigantic yet our leaders ignore what 98% of the American people want and continue to attack teachers and punish them for things they have no power over.
And this was only from Part 2 of The PDK/Gallup Poll in Oct. 2014
http://pdkpoll.pdkintl.org/october/
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I remain confused as to why people still idolize Friedman, especially when it comes to competition in education. He totally ignores or misunderstands and wrongly describes the key questions of equality of information and equality of agency on the part of parents. He blythely assumes that all parents are equal in all ways when it comes to these things. He also completely ignores Gresham’s dynamic, how corrupt, unscrupulous actors can quickly and easily gain advantage over ethical competitors, how market forces select not the best product or service, but the most dishonest providers who always have their toes up against the line that is fraud. And then there’s the idea of putting shareholder value before all else being paramount and rewarding management for making that happen, real or not. What could possibly go wrong here?
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Aside from the fact that Meryl Tisch is a gazillion-eiress, what are her exact qualifications that made her such an excellent choice to be Chancellor of the Board of Regents?
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I don’t know how official any of these awards are, but it seems this cat is already on the honor roll:
We’re already in repeats with honoring superintendents and educators from New York’s lowest-need and least integrated districts? What about Stephen Lazar and Jia Lee, two New York City public school teachers whose intelligent, well-reasoned, and impassioned testimony regarding testing before a Senate subcommittee made me proud to be an NYC DOE parent, even though I disagreed with probably 80% of it?
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In George Will’s 12-25-14 column, “Governments derive their “just powers” from the consent of the governed.”
Perhaps the government of NY has lost some legitimacy to their just powers with regard to education.
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So I post this again:
http://freedomoutpost.com/2014/01/abolishing-representative-government-education-common-core-choice-charter-schools/
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State control, the Teaparty is going to LOVE THIS! I’m sure they can smell the communism that just must be a part of it! What we are seeing is the liberal and conservative factions of reformer supported politicians chasing their tails, each in their own way sock puppets for the profiteers, while the non partisan cash extractors go about business as usual. Either that or Cuomo is a total nutjob of an outlier. SInce both things could be true at the same time I’m just not sure, except for the cash extraction part. That never changes.
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Hey, Steve Cohen. It’s great to hear another superintendent stand up and take on the powers that be up in Albany.
I was talking to a longtime friend of mine (a teacher, too) and he mentioned the former Monticello principal who just won a huge lottery payout. And, my friend said, “Ah, I can’t believe an administrator got it….”
But, you know, I had to reply, No, this was a good guy…that principal who won the dough.
Sometimes, there just seems to be this long running antagonism between teachers and administrators…. like, if it’s good for the principal it’s gotta be bad for the teachers. Maybe that’s just the way it is in any workplace….bosses and workers, since the start of time.
But I love to see our principals and superintendents speaking out now. I can’t tell you what a shot in the arm it is for all of us who don’t get out of the classroom much.
And, of course, we ARE all really is this together now.. To use that Martin Luther King quote again, “We may have all come in different ships, but we’re in the same boat now.”
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“Sometimes, there just seems to be this long running antagonism between teachers and administrators”
I taught for 30 years and worked with ten or more principals. Any antagonism had to do with an administrator on an individual basis.
A few of those principals—two or three—were very supportive and popular with teachers. Most were somewhat supportive and got along quite well with teachers.
I can only think of two who most of the teachers fought against as a group—both were brutal dictators who supported the early public education reform movement and clearly and deliberately demonized and attacked teachers offering little to no support to teachers.
Under those two brutal autocratic principals, the teacher turnover rate soared. The first monster had a 50% turnover of teachers in two years, and I was one of the many who left that intermediate school and transferred to one of the three high schools in that school district.
Then three principals later, the high school ended up with the second monster the teachers nicknamed Hitler. The turnover rate soared again.
This idiot was so unpopular and caused so much unrest, that the school board ended his five-year contract two years early and fired him with a cash settlement to get rid of him.
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Last Night Hundreds of Teachers and Parents Met in Saratoga to demand equitable funding in Upstate NY. We left an impresssion on the media but will Governor Cuomo listen to us?
Media Coverage –
Post-Star – http://poststar.com/news/local/schools-state-makes-demands-without-providing-enough-funding/article_de92c894-a2b7-11e4-8b21-679f4a6daf64.html
Times Union – http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/Proposals-fall-short-panelists-say-6034293.php
CBS 6 – http://www.cbs6albany.com/news/features/top-story/stories/districts-meet-eliminate-gap-adjustment-22636.shtml
TWC News – http://www.twcnews.com/nys/capital-region/news/2015/01/22/call-for-action-at-stand-up-for-upstate-schools-event.html
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