May 25, 2022
Check out our submitted budget testimony before the NYC Council Finance Committee for today. We urged the Chair Justin Brannan and other Council Members to prevent the Mayor's proposed cuts to school budgets of $375 million, that are projected to lead to a loss of about 3200 teaching positions, which in turn may cause the sharpest increase in class sizes since the Great Recession, the last thing NYC kids need to recover from the Covid crisis. We also ask them to oppose the proposed $1.5 billion in cuts to new capacity in the capital plan, which is unsupported by evidence and apparently relies on an unrealistic change to the school capacity formula that assumes every middle school and high school classroom can be scheduled for every period of the day.
Our testimony also follows. If you'd like to submit your own comments on these cuts, you can send an email to testimony@council.nyc.gov by Friday.
Wednesday, May 25, 2022
Our testimony to the NYC Council urging them to prevent the Mayor's proposed cuts to school budgets and the capital plan!
Friday, March 4, 2022
Why Mayoral control must be amended ; testimony for today
Joint State Legislative hearings are being held today starting at 10 AM; you can watch them here. I'm slated to speak around 2:30 PM. Though we've opposed the current governance system because one-man rule does not work, is inherently undemocratic and leads to dysfunctional decision-making, opposition to Mayoral control has grown in NYC and nationwide in the last few years.
Several districts that once had Mayoral or state control have returned to an elected school board, as I point out in my testimony below.
Thursday, October 14, 2021
The five myths of mayoral control: Testimony before the Assembly Education Committee
I gave testimony today on school governance and Mayoral control before the Assembly Education Committee. Most large districts whose schools have suffered under Mayoral or state control including Detroit, Newark, and now Chicago have gone back to elected school boards.
Why shouldn't NYC voters have the same rights?
I was unable to say most of what I wanted to say about the problems with Mayoral control and why it should be reformed, but here is what I wanted to say below.
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
Testimony to encourage integration and the reform of the specialized HS admissions process
The admissions to the specialized high schools has resulted in terribly racially disparate results and relies on one controversial high-stakes exam, the SHSAT. Sadly, some of the proposals put forward by Council Members, including expanding gifted programs and the number of selective schools, would merely worsen segregation and stratification, as I explain in my submitted testimony below.
Sunday, November 8, 2015
Class Size Matters Testimony on the need to fundamentally revamp the Common Core and aligned exams
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credit: Katie Lapham |
It appears that outside NYC, the testimony on the Common Core has been overwhelmingly negative, as the poll numbers indicate , with voters two-to- one saying the standards have worsened education in the state. In NYC, though testimony was more evenly divided, the pro-Common Core witnesses appeared to have been primarily hired guns from astroturf organizations funded by the Gates and Walton Foundations, including Educators for Excellence, Students First and High Achievement NY. UPDATE: see also how sadly, this NYC 2nd grader at a DOE event said that the purpose of reading books is to do better on tests -- more evidence of how the Common Core high-stakes regimen is undermining the joy of reading.