Carol Burris, executive director of the Network for Public Education, has been active in the resistance to New York’s state’s reliance on high-stakes testing for several years. As a high school principal, she helped to organize other principals across the state in opposition to test-based evaluation of both principals and teachers. About 40 percent of the state’s principals signed the petition opposing the so-called Annual Professional Performance Review (APPR) based on test scores.
In this article, she describes the recent dramatic turn of events in New York. This state led the way in corporate-style reform. For many years, the Board of Regents–the state’s governing body for education–has strongly supported standards, testing, and accountability as the key to statewide success. Since the passage of charter legislation in 1998, the charter sector has grown, especially in the state’s urban districts. The leader of the Regents, Merryl Tisch, is a member of one of the city’s wealthiest and most philanthropic families. Tisch was a member of the Regents for the past 20 years, and chancellor since 2009. She pushed hard to win a Race to the Top grant of $700 million. She pushed hard for Common Core and rigorous testing. She selected David Steiner of Hunter College as Commissioner of Education, then pushed him aside and selected John King. She said it was all about the kids, particularly the poor kids. She thought that high standards and rigorous tests would be good for them.
But then came the parent opt out rebellion, and state officials went into a frenzy trying to figure out how to placate the angry parents. As it happened, Tisch lost her most powerful political ally in the legislature, and suddenly the landscape began to change. There are 17 members of the Board of Regents. Less than a year ago, six of them signed a letter protesting Governor Cuomo’s demand for tougher testing, accountability, and teacher evaluation policies. (A seventh member gave conditional support to the dissidents.) At the time, the dissidents seemed to be fighting a steep uphill battle, with the governor and the board majority opposed to their ideas. A month after the issuance of their letter, the board hired MaryEllen Elia as state commissioner to replace the unpopular John King. Elia was well known as an ardent advocate for high-stakes testing, the Common Core, and test-based accountability.
Burris explains in her article the miraculous revolution that occurred in less than a year.
Tisch announced that she would not run for reappointment by the Legislature. One of the dissidents, Dr. Betty Rosa, announced that she wanted to succeed Tisch. The possibility of Rosa winning seemed far-fetched. But incredibly, she was elected in a secret ballotmby the Regents on a vote of 15-0, with two abstentions.
As Burris writes, Rosa has been critical of the Common Core, high-stakes testing, and test-based evaluation. She was supported by the parents in the opt out movement.
The dissidents have taken charge.
Burris writes about her personal interactions with Betty Rosa, who is a career educator:
Rosa was one of three Regents who voted against the teacher evaluation system known as APPR. In 2011 she met with principals and actively listened to our concerns. As a former administrator, she understood why the practice was bad for kids, and never waivered in her opposition, referring to the inclusion of scores as “poison.”
In 2013, she publicly spoke out against the Common Core, accusing the State Education Department of manipulating data and ignoring successful schools in order to create a myth of massive failure to support their reforms. And last year she led a group of seven Regents (all women and nearly all career educators), in opposition to Cuomo’s revision of teacher evaluations. The seven created a position paper of dissent regarding the Governor’s law that increased the proportion of test scores in teacher evaluations, and six of the seven voted against the New York State Education Department’s revisions.
Burris predicts what she expects from Rosa. She calls it a “sea change.” I call it a miracle.

As a local lard of Ed member and a retired teacher I pray that it is a miracle! We need to get back to research generated progress and best practice. The witch hunt needs to end and “professional” put back into the teaching profession!
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Wonderful. I hope this helps to turn the tide again the deformers. Perhaps even motivate other cities and states to opt out and fight entrenched money interest and bought politicians. Good for you New York!
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Now is the time to grow the Parent Optout numbers and get politicians to return teaching to a focus on helping children learn. Student tests should be diagnostic tools for teachers and not weapons that threaten their careers.
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Student tests should also be diagnostic tools made with a FULL teacher input. Outsider-produced tests, especially those which are put together by testmakers under district time pressure, often have very little to do with what a teacher has been teaching.
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And I pray you are right. That it is a miracle and that we can now look long and harder and involve more to try to improve education for all children. Let’s look for successful models, let’s analyze them clearly if we can and let’s find all kinds of good and great models that fit in all communities where the culture varies (local style etc.) and let’s have high expectations and put money and programs in place in a good way. And let’s address the poverty that thwarts too many. Let’s give hope to all. And realistic expectations but NOT reward laziness and bitterness and lack of willingness to make changes. Let’s ask the best teachers to come together to show what is possible. They are out there. All grade levels, all communities, all regions etc. Will it take time, money, effort, vision? Yes, but miracles can happen.
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“Miracles” don’t resolve crises, struggle does. To the extent there is a real change happening in NYS school governance (and please keep in mind that Cuomo’s law mandating that 50% of teacher evaluations be test-based is still on the books), that has come about as a result of the passion, fortitude and reject-the-bullshit efforts of parents and teachers.
We should leave talk about “miracles to the so-called reformers, who must fabricate such nonsense because everything they do is based on false premises and false promises; they gush about “miracles” because they are either naïfs or frauds, and have nothing but lies and magical thinking to justify their smash-and-grab policies.
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Well put.
😎
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Let’s not forget that Cuomo vowed to “bust the monopoly of public education” in 2014. Clearly when the governor fails to understand the democratic value of the public service of public schools, there is a big problem to overcome. Are teachers a “monopoly” like police or fire fighters? This type of rhetoric is straight from his handlers, the hedge fund cabal. I seriously doubt they are going to shrivel up and back off, although it may be harder for them without Tisch and the changes to the Board of Regents.
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The 15 – 0 secret vote by the BOR (2 abstentions) is a very strong indicator that, now freed from the dynamics of a Tisch lead board, significant changes (for the better) are on the way.
If this comes to be, some can call this a miracle, others will call it one of the most effective and important grassroots movements in the history of education policy, others will call the inevitable triumph of right over wrong. Call it what you want, if it happens, NY parents will have a huge victory to celebrate.
And despite the flaws in the new ESSA, this change will show the degree to which John King and the USDOE has been neutered by political pressure. Congrats to the parents of NYS.
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Viva Betty Rosa!
I agree with Michael Fiorillo —
No matter what it takes, we must rally around Chancellor Rosa, and amplify the fact that her election well serves the interests of public school education.
Appreciation to all who supported her. Continued pressure on politicians and media who are on the fence or denying equity to the public schools. Scorn to those doing damage control about the Common Core and making false promises of changes in testing. Redoubled efforts to encourage downtrodden parents to see that there is good reason to opt out of NYS testing in April.
Let the 99% be heard. We must let everyone know that this brilliant educator has a Popular Mandate for Real Reform. And we’re not going away.
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In the NYT article on Dr. Rosa’s election to the chancellorship, reporter Kate Taylor once again FAILS to do her homework. She continues to state that test scores will not be used to evaluate NY teachers. NOTHING could be further from the truth. Unless the law is formally changed, ALL teachers in NY will be evaluated on local or state test scores. Some for students they do not teach; and some for subject matter that they do not teach. Test scores and teacher evaluations have been the true root of all evil in Cuomo’s Regents Reform Agenda and the bogus APPR evaluation. I hope Rosa also realizes just how completely INEFFECTIVE the use of MArzano/Danielson rubrics have been at identifying teacher/program quality.
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New Yorkers have to turn to the Washington Post and this blog to learn about NY schools because the NY Times has been absent or biased in most of their education reporting. Aside from their Room for Debate special on charter school cherrypicking, the Times has seemed like a news for hire operation.
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Give credit to the NY Times for sharp coverage of Eva’s myths
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The dumbing down of America continues.
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Strange comment from a STEM proponent. Have you checked out the list of INTEL/Westinghouse Science Talent Search finalists from
1942 – 2016. This dumbed down state of NY you refer to happens to lead the nation. And none of this is attributed to the Common Core standrads and Pearson’s academic death traps.
New York 967
California 266
Illinois 173
Pennsylvania 119
New Jersey 111
Maryland 110
Florida 108
Virginia 91
Massachusetts 92
Ohio 87
Texas 85
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What do you mean?
Has something happened in Virginia to reduce intelligence there?
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“The dumbing down of America continues.”
Why, yes, Virginia! You have always been proof positive of exactly that! How does it feel?
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I don’t think we are at a “sea change” moment here just yet. All I really see is a state apparatus adapting and changing their reform agenda to meet an unaccounted for variable: parent resistance.
There is NO abandonment of the reform agenda by anybody. Lets not forget, the “sea change” we are seeing all has to do with testing. They will find, at some point, the “just right” formula for that, and then believe me, the shit-show will continue. Step #1 for them is getting opt out numbers under control, and we may see that happen this spring. If opt-out numbers are the same as last year (they’ll call that “contained”) or lower (they’ll call that a “win”) we’ll see the reform agenda suddenly becomes a bit more alive again in the state.
As for Rosa…..as I said before, I will be reserving any hope there until I hear a clear, unequivocal, no-wiggle-room, no-up-for-some-interpretation, statement against VAM on every level. Until I hear that, out loud and not through a grapevine of filters, I won’t expect much. While she was a teacher, she also spent considerable time as an administrator. We have forgotten that before this whole reform thing, administrators kinda sorta were the force operating against teachers for the most part down at the district and school level. My local admin would love nothing more than some ability to fire teachers at will. (I know there are plenty of “good” admin types and some have been teachers most vocal supporters, but where’s Rosa on that spectrum??)
I suspect, like terrorism, we need to see the reform movement as a constant sustained thing that will be very hard to ever have a pure win against in the short term. The most we can hope for is a long, constant fight that inevitably finds their agenda passé and irrelevant.
Early claims of victory and miracles will only be seen at some later date as naive and embarrassingly wrong.
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I guess we all fail your purity test.
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Stay cynical my friend.
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I am with you NYS. As long as testing stays in place, the rest is semantics. The facts on the ground do not change.
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Abagail
Yearly testing in math and ELA is federal LAW under the ESSA. The testing is required to “stay in place”. Dr. Rosa and the new BOR can only determine HOW test results are used. There is NO federal requirement to use test scores to evaluate teachers. This will hopefully go away under Rosa’s leadership a well as other punitive measures such as AYP.
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I thought being strongly against VAM was a cornerstone of our side? Holding someone to that standard makes me some kind of Puritan?
Pointing out that perhaps we aren’t at a sea change moment in NY when looked at critically, was, I thought, an uncomfortable but necessary thing to do, as our fight continues.
Point out where I am wildly off the mark…..please……as that would be the meaningful and substantive kind of conversation we need on our side. Doing the whole claiming victory prematurely thing is for amateurs like NYSUT leadership.
Sorry if I take this whole thing seriously.
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Reasons to be optimistic:
15 – 0 vote by the BOR
Dr. Rosa’s words
No Tisch; No King
Cuomo (the demagogue) has changed his stripes
The Lederman case
Chris Gibson
The moratorium
Parent rebelion
A 3 year record of FAILURE
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You are right and real.
Burris is cheering based on expectations.
You are in a different place, because you have to bear the effects of bad policies.
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Reblogged this on stopcommoncorenys.
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DFER’s tentacles are exposed in a Center for Media and Democracy article published a couple of days ago.
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