Nicholas Tampio is a professor of political science at Fordham University. As a father, he was outraged by the Common Core, so outraged that he wrote a book about it, “Common Core: National Education Standards and the threat to Democracy.”. In New York State, the person most responsible for the quick and unpopular rollout of Common Core was State Commissioner John King. King was recently named the Chancellor of the State University of New York.
Tampio expresses his view of King here.
On Dec. 5, the State University of New York appointed John B. King Jr. as the new chancellor. His biography may give us clues as to his possible plan to prioritize workforce training over the liberal arts for SUNY students.
King was state commissioner of education between 2011 and early 2015. Then-chancellor of the Board of Regents Merryl Tisch hired him to implement the state’s Race to the Top plan. The plan had interlocking parts. Schools teach the Common Core learning standards in reading, writing, and math. Students take end of year tests whose scores are entered into a database. Teachers are evaluated on students’ test score growth. Schools with low test scores get taken over by the state.
One year during his reign as commissioner, 155,000 New York students refused the end-of-year Common Core tests. To his critics, King was a hypocrite for sending his own children to a private Montessori school in Albany while he was rolling out the Common Core for other people’s children.
People in the test refusal movement, such as myself, were trying to explain why we did not want an education system for our children focused on standardized testing. Alas, King and Tisch dug in their heels, and the main planks of the Regents’ reform agenda remain in place….
Race to the Top incentivized states to build a P-20 longitudinal data system. This system tracks a child from pre-school (or pre-natal) until 8 years until after they graduate from high school. Nancy Zimpher, SUNY chancellor from 2011 to 2017, was a champion of creating career pathways. King may well continue her efforts to prepare children, from an early age, for a specific job that they will do as adults.
In 2018, King told the the Silicon Valley Education Policy Summit: “Whenever I go around the country, when I talk with employers, they talk about the challenge of finding the workforce they need. They talk about the challenge of finding folks with the right skills.”
Now, SUNY press release notes that King will work to connect “K-12 schools, higher education institutions, and employers to tailor high school curriculum to meet the needs of a modern-day workforce.”
To be clear, college students should learn a wide array of skills to prepare them for the workforce. And the Education Trust advocates commendable ideals of expanding college access, improving college graduation rates, and making college affordable, particularly for students of color and students from low-income backgrounds.
Still, we ought to think about what kind of future is in store for New York students enrolling in a state university or college.
In the body of the SUNY press release, there is little indication that King values faculty governance, research, or the liberal arts. SUNY could aspire to become a world-class higher education system with laboratories, research resources, study abroad programs, libraries, and so forth. But the press release will not assuage academics who want to teach subjects that do not directly translate into jobs.
SUNY enrollment fell 20% over the past decade, a trend that started before the pandemic. SUNY could aspire to make the school attractive to bright students who can afford to go to private liberal arts colleges or universities. But the early indications are that that is not the priority of SUNY’s leadership.
Over a decade ago, Tisch and King created a K-12 education system that would funnel students into tracks based on test scores. Now, they are working together to build the rest of the P-20 system that place those children into their assigned slots.
In the near future, rich New York kids will go to expensive out-of-state or private schools. And everyone else will be placed in a career pipeline that is hard to escape.
The folks who have been controlling education in NY for two decades on’t.care about education and will not go quietly.
And they are milking the NY taxpayers for all they are worth.
And they are worth billions.
Still, we ought to think about…
WHAT spawns meaningful
change, and what
fails to do so.
If the book “Common Core”
by Nicholas Tampio,
Johns Hopkins University
Press, 2018-Jan, fell
on the deaf ears,of
the “make me stop”,
test GIVERS, will
more Tampio thoughts
spawn meaningful
change?
Point, doing the same,
over and over again,
has yet to bring
about meaningful
change.
You wage a war on ideas on multiple time scales.
Sometimes, you score a quick victory. I wrote a piece criticizing the hiring of Jim Malatras. Things may have happened the exact same way if I didn’t write the piece. But there was little enthusiasm to defend him when he got in trouble.
https://www.lohud.com/story/opinion/2020/08/26/tapping-jim-malatras-run-suny-new-york-has-failed/3442416001/
Sometimes, you have to play the long game. The roots of the Common Core arguably go back to the governor’s meeting in Charlottesville in 1989. Took them 20+ years to make and execute the plan. Dismantling it may take as long.
The FY 2021 Executive Budget recommended $11.9 billion for SUNY with a workforce of 46,836.
SUNY encompasses 64 colleges and universities including research and doctoral granting institutions, four-year degree institutions, 30 community colleges, three hospitals, a law school, a veterans’ home, and partnership with a national laboratory.
That’s an awful lot on money in various and sundry accounts that will allow vast amounts of discretionary funding to be given away in shadowy deals–i.e., contracts and consultancies.
So, Tisch and her lap dog, John King, will control the way the money is spent and which favored parties get the largesse. Meanwhile, King lacks the experience to be the chancellor and SUNY students can expect tuition increases to support this enterprise.
King also was given a professorship. Not clear whether he will get another salary. Also not clear what he will teach since he was never a university professor.
What is he a professor of?
Bullshit?
“King of Bullshit”
Dr. Ravitch,
He will not get another salary. That is not the practice in higher education. He will get the opportunity to go to the faculty when he leaves administration. Given that he has a doctorate in education and experience as the secretary of education, I think he will likely teach in a school of education if that happens.
Again, this is not uncommon. Janet Napolitano only had a JD degree and had never held a job in higher education when she was appointed President of the University of California and a tenured professor in the Goldman School of Public Policy at Berkley. My chancellor has never taught a college level course, but is also a tenured member of the faculty. Generally speaking, if a department/school is not willing to tenure a person, that person will not be hired for chancellor, president, provost, or dean positions on a campus. System presidents are a little different, but the people I know who have been finalists for such positions have insisted on also having a tenured faculty appointment.
James Malatras also was unqualified to be SUNY chancellor, but Gov. Cuomo ordered SUNY chairman Tisch to tap his dirty henchman for the position. Political clout trumps competence, and previous “administrative” work is sold as superior to scholarship and proven job-relevant university leadership. John King’s anointment via Tisch is, in many ways, the sequel.
👍
I’m disturbed by the tone of some of the responses, King received the same contract as his predecessors, I attended the Regents meetings during King’s tenure as commissioner, he is a firm believer in high standards for all students, as well as for prospective teachers, unfortunately he increasingly failed to listen to teachers and parents and increasingly alienated the public.
I had the opportunity to talk with him at Regents meetings, he opposed attempts to lessen requirements, as he was urged to do by so-called “advocacy” organizations, while we disagreed on the pathways we agreed on the goal.
“… King received the same contract as his predecessors,”
Not true.
Also King was punching bag for Tisch at meetings where parents opposed “botched implementation” of the Common Core–a testing overkill deal. Anyone can talk about raising standards–yada yada–in the absence of a sound program to do it.
Anyone who listens to Gates and his astroturf groups is a foot licking wagtail. King has has always had a close and strange relationship with certain wealthy individuals. He was expelled from high school his junior year and shortly thereafter accepted to Harvard University. Not a legacy. Think about that.
Anyone who believes Common Core are “high standards” doesn’t know anything at all about Common Core OR standards.
Civility
Civil is
As civil does
Civil gist?
Or civil buzz?
Obviously, some find the words of criticism of King here more disturbing than the actions of King.
To say that such indignation is “misplaced” is an extreme understatement.
King and King alone is responsible for his actions and for the fact that he has “alienated” teachers, parents and the wider public.
If he and others don’t like it. It’s just too damned bad.
Hi Diane,
I am a friend and mentor to many junior scholars. There are not enough jobs for bright, hardworking scholars doing important work. It is agonizing to watch Merryl Tisch give professorships away like candy to Malatras and King.
Apparently you never heard that it’s all about who you know and not about what.
When working for a former president is on your resume and that President is a reference,nothing else matters.
Nationwide students are seeking post secondary education that leads to employment, not necessarily a degree, in many ways mirroring European secondary education… a 2- year Associate Degree or a 4- year BA may leave you jobless, the world of post secondary education is changing and colleges must also change, as painful as it my be for “traditionalists”
But the question is about King’s philosophy and agenda for students. Will students have choices and choose their career path, or will they be funneled onto a path by a system of aptitude and test scores beginning at a young age?
A more complex question is, how do we educate and otherwise provide students with opportunities to learn about–or even be aware of–the broad range of careers?
And how do we do we do this without neglecting the broad general curriculum which we call the “liberal arts” at the college level, but is important at all ages? (In an age-appropriate way of course.)
“A job provides a livelihood, and an education provides a life,” goes the saying.
Not sure about his philosophy (whether he even has one), but I’m pretty sure his Fullofsophy is “it”.
Full of it.
Students are increasingly seeking post secondary education that leads to a job, colleges have to respond to demand, colleges have to be flexible and adjust their model … change is hard, and required to survive
No where has anyone mentioned the role played by Coleman in the design and selling of Common Core, and of his close, twin, connection to King. Coleman is now head of the Regents in NY. A double dose of the devil.
A double scoop of poop.
NY used to have a pretty good education system, but in recent decades they have been hiring mainly clowns and it shows.
David Coleman is president of the College Board, which sells the SAT. He is not a member of the New York Board of Regents.
Thanks for this correction. We have so much happening in California that keeping up with NY is challenging. I did remember however that Coleman had a top job…wonder if this in partnership with Pearson…for major profiteering?
He is paid $1 million a year.
Coleman is not head of the Regents in NYS, he has no role
John B. Dud.
What’s he going to force New Yorkers to sit in this time, while he’s building it?
A yacht?
A race car?
Or, maybe a spacecraft?
Maybe Musk would be a better employer for him?
Ha ha ha.
I think Musk’s is currently building a bird while flying it.
Make that a turd.
He should probably rename it “Splatter”
Tge. Latest Muskox turd:
Elon threatens employees with legal action if they leak anything about him but meanwhile he is leaking all sorts of stuff on former management.
Why anyone would want to work for that clown is a complete mystery.
For anyone pining for the good old days and policies of folks like John King, here’s a brief history refresher
The Mywayman” (after “The
Highwayman”, by Alfred Noyes)
PART ONE
THE VAM was a torrent of darkness
among reformy goals
The school was a ghostly galleon tossed
upon rocky shoals
The Test was a ribbon of Pearson tying
the Common Core,
And the Mywayman came riding—
Riding—riding—
The Mywayman came riding, up to the
school-house door.
He’d a half-cocked plan in his forehead,
a shill of Gates for his spin,
A coat of the cleanest whitewash, and
breaches of law within;
Though served with a Lederman wrinkle
(the suits were up to his thigh!)
He rode with a jeweled twinkle,
His ed-u-bots a-twinkle,
His Tests and VAMs a twinkle, under the
New York sky.
Over the cobbles he clattered and
clashed in the dark school-yard,
And he tapped with his Test on the
shutters, but all was locked and barred;
He whistled a tune to the window, and
who should be waiting there
But the Test Lord’s VAM-eyed Super,
Elia, the New York Super
Planting a bright red “Opt Not!!” inside
the “Opt out” lair.
And dark in the dark old school-yard a
rusty swing-set creaked
Where Diane the Blogger listened; her
curiosity piqued;
Her eyes were filled with sadness, her
worry was plain as day,
For she loved the public schoolhouse,
The American public schoolhouse
Alert as can be she listened, and she
heard the Governor say—
“Hear this, my well-paid Super, I’m after a prize to-night,
And I shall make Opt-out parents fold
before the morning light;
Yet, if they press me sharply, and harry
me through the day,
Then look for me by moonlight,
Watch for me by moonlight,
I’ll come to thee by moonlight, though
parents should bar the way.”
He rose upright in the stirrups; he scarce
could hide his rage ,
He tried to mask what the case meant,
but face read like a page
As the franks and beans from the dinner
were mingling with his bile
He cursed its taste in the moonlight,
(Oh, putrid taste in the moonlight!)
Then he tugged at his reign in the
moonlight, and galloped away to Long
Isle.
PART TWO
He did not come in the dawning; he did
not come at noon;
And out o’ the tawny sunset, before the
rise o’ the moon,
When the Test was a Möbius ribbon,
looping the Coleman lore,
An Opt-out troop came marching—
Marching—marching—
The parents all came marching, up to
the Governor’s door.
They said no word to the Test Lord, they
mocked the test instead,
And they nagged the Super and grilled
her about everything she’d said;
All of them knew what the case meant,
with Lederman at their side!
There were parents at every window;
And hell at one dark window;
Elia could see, through the window, the
road that he would ride.
They had tried to get her attention,
‘bout many an invalid test;
They had written a letter to meet her, to
discuss the VAMs and the rest!
“Now, keep good watch!” and they
dissed her.
She heard the Governor say—
Look for me by moonlight;
Watch for me by moonlight;
I’ll come to thee by moonlight, though
parents should bar the way!
She twisted her claims for the parents;
but all their Not!s held good!
She waved her hands at the figures, she
said were “misunderstood!”
She stretched and strained credibility,
and the hours crawled by like years,
Till, now, on the stroke of midnight,
Cold, on the stroke of midnight,
The tip of one finger touched it! The
statute at least was hers!
The tip of one finger touched it; she
strove no more for the Test!
Up, she stood up to attention, with the
statute above the rest ,
She would not risk a hearing; she would
not strive again;
For the road lay bare in the moonlight;
Blank and bare in the moonlight;
And the blood of her veins in the
moonlight throbbed to the Gov’s refrain
.
The quote of laws! Had he heard it? Her quote of NY laws?;
Her quote of laws — from the distance?
The “Rights of Parents” clause?
Down the ribbon of Möbius, over the
brow with his bill,
The Mywayman came riding,
Riding, riding!
The parents looked to their stymying!
She stood up, straight and still!
Tlot-tlot, in the frosty silence! Tlot-tlot,
in the echoing night!
Nearer he came and nearer! Her face
was like a light!
Her eyes grew wide for a moment; her
heart, it missed a beat
Then her fingers moved in the
moonlight,
Her pen-stroke shattered the moonlight,
Shattered the tests in the moonlight,
sealing the Gov’s defeat
He turned; he spurred to the West; he
did not know who blinked
Bowed, with her head o’er edict,
drenched with her own ink!
Not till the dawn he heard it, and his
face grew grey to hear
How Elia, the New York Super,
The Test Lord’s well-paid Super,
Had watched for the Gov in the
moonlight, determined his future there
Back, he spurred like a madman,
shrieking a curse to the sky,
With Elia caving behind him and his
testing vanquished nigh!
Wide-read- were his slurs on the
Twitter; wide-spread was the parents’
vote,
When they opted out on the test day,
In droves and droves on the test day,
And he lay in the flood on the test day,
with a bunch of ‘rents at his throat
And still of a winter’s night, they say,
when the VAMmers roam like trolls
When the school is a ghostly galleon
tossed upon rocky shoals,
When the Test is a ribbon of Pearson
tying the Common Core,
A Mywayman comes riding—
Riding—riding—
A Mywayman comes riding, up to the
school-house door.
Over the cobbles he clatters and clangs
in the dark school-yard,
And he taps with his Test on the
shutters, but all is locked and barred;
He whistles a tune to the window, and
who should be waiting there
But the Test Lord’s VAM-eyed Super,
Elia, the New York Super
Planting a bright red “Opt Not!!” inside
the “Opt out” lair.
Wow.
At least you can create something out of this disaster. And, to conjure up a laugh for us all, too. That’s something.
There’s a row of stumps down the road…trees and brush I cut when all this King-crap was happening. I’d go down after school and just start chopping the stuff down.
The stumps are rotting but hydralike, still sending shoots and suckers to the surface. (I have to go and hack them back into the ground occasionally.)
They’re like the Common Core …a festering disaster.
Yeah, Common Core never disappeared.
It was just renamed.
I’m surprised Andrew Cuomo hasn’t tried the same stunt: changing his name to Michelle Obama.
He could paint his face black, don a wig, run for president and no one would even know.
Of course, he’d have to keep a good distance from the women in his administration once he got elected.
No pinching behinds or someone might catch on to the ruse.
And certainly no attempts at kissing on the lips.
Not incidentally, the two deformers that The Mywayman is about (Elia and Cuomo) are now gone — crawled back under their respective rocks.
But John King, who supported the same policies (Common Core, standardized testing, VAM , charters, etc), is not only still around but still being promoted to influential positions.
Why is that?
Excellent!
Thanks, but it basically wrote itself.
It’s funny. I actually wrote that before Elia revealed/admitted to parents that NY State law allowed them to opt their children out of the testing — an admission that must have really ticked Cuomo off (just as I imagined in the Mywayman)
Sometimes life does imitate art.
Who knows, maybe Elia read The Mywayman and saw quoting “The rights of parents clause” as a way of redeeming herself, even if just a little.
Though I doubt it.
John King is inextricably tied to all the reformy bullshit that has led NY and the entire country down the garden path to the cliff
Here’s another one on the subject
The Billionaire and the Reformer” (parody of The Walrus and the Carpenter, by Lewis Carroll)
The pol was pining for a charter,
pining with all his might:
He did his very best to make
The regulations sleight —
Which wasn’t hard, because the gov
Was charter acolyte
The public was pining sulkily,
Because they thought the pol
Had got no business to be there
After the charter stole —
“Incredible of him,” they said,
“To work for charter dole”
The money was tight as tight could be,
The coffers were bare as bare.
You could not see a dollar, cuz
No dollar was in there:
No Race was funding overhead —
There was no Race to fund.
The Billionaire and the Reformer
Were talking under bleachers;
They wept like anything to see
Such qualities of teachers:
If these were only cleared away,’
Our schools would be like peaches!’
If seven Chetty’s with seven VAMs
VAMmed for half a year,
Do you suppose,’the Billionaire said,
That they could get them clear?’
I doubt it,’ said the Reformer,
And shed a bitter tear.
O students, come and walk with us!’
The Billionaire did beseech.
A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk,
A better way to teach
We cannot do with more than four,
To give a hand to each.’
The eldest student looked at him,
But never a word he said:
The eldest student winked his eye,
And shook his heavy head —
Meaning to say he did not choose
To go with Bill, and fled
But four young students hurried up,
All eager for the fest:
Their hair was brushed, their faces washed,
Their shoes were clean and best —
And this was odd, because, you know,
They’re going to a test.
Four other students followed them,
And yet another four;
And thick and fast they came at last,
And more, and more, and more —
All hopping through the student waves
And scrambling to the door.
The Billionaire and the Reformer
Walked on a mile or so,
And then they rested on a rock
Conveniently low:
And all the little students stood
And waited in a row.
The time has come,’ the Billionaire said,
To talk of many things:
Of Common Core — and standard tests — of passing scores — and VAMs —
And why the schools are failing [Not!] —
And whether pigs have wings.’
But wait a bit,’ the students cried,
Before we have our talk;
For some of us are out of breath,
And some of us can’t walk!’
No hurry!’ said the Reformer.
As patient as a hawk.
A lot of bread,’ the Billionaire said,
Is what we chiefly need:
Testing and Common Core besides
Are very good indeed —
Now if you’re ready, students dear,
We can begin to weed.’
But not with us!’ the students cried,
Turning a little blue.
After such kindness, that would be
A dismal thing to do!’
The day is fine,’ the Billionaire said.
Do you admire the view?
It was so kind of you to come!
And you are very nice!’
The Reformer said nothing but
‘That cut score won’t suffice:
I wish you were not quite so deaf —
I’ve had to tell you twice!’
It seems a shame,’ the Billionaire said,
To play them such a trick,
After we’ve brought them out so far,
And made them test so quick!’
The Reformer said nothing but
The testing’s spread too thick!’
I weep for you,’ the Billionaire said:
I deeply sympathize.’
With sobs and tears he sorted out
The scores of biggest size,
Holding his pocket-handkerchief
Before his streaming eyes.
O students,’ said the Reformer,
You’ve had a pleasant run!
Shall we be trotting home again?’
But answer came there none —
And this was scarcely odd, because
They’d flunked out every one.”