Monday, February 1, 2016

New York City Chancellors: Too Much Power and Corruption

With the old/new news that Carmen Farina is up to her old tricks, I thought that I would post Wikipedia's history of NYC Chancellors. See below. Quite a bunch, totally unaccountable for their actions. I think it is way past the time to get rid of the Mayor appointing the Chancellor, and we need to have a citywide vote on both the schools job and the NYC Board of Education, brought back under new rules of accountability but VOTED in, not appointed.

See this post as well. These people are in charge of the process known as the rubber rooms, and The Gotcha Squad. These people, in charge of $25 million+ and a network of padded pockets underneath, are extremely dangerous to the health, safety and welfare of kids, especially under the inept political-media-industrial complex Mayor Bill de Blasio works for.
Betsy Combier
betsy.combier@gmail.com
NYC Current Chancellor Carmen Farina

Fariña’s failures prove that de Blasio can’t be trusted

Carmen Farina and Mayor Bill de Blasio
Who will control New York City public schools on July 1?
The question has become a referendum on Mayor de Blasio’s leadership. De Blasio requested permanent mayoral control of the schools last year. In June, an unimpressed state Legislature renewed it for a single year.
De Blasio was essentially on probation.
At an Albany budget hearing last week, de Blasio floated a seven-year extension — ensuring his control through a second term — when this year’s renewal runs out. A still-skeptical Senate
Majority Leader John Flanagan responded that he “supports mayoral control .
.. but not at any price.”
Flanagan and his Republican colleagues are put off by de Blasio’s antagonism toward charter schools. They’ve also called for more scrutiny of the city’s education spending.
De Blasio, then, hasn’t earned a longer leash. Why not?
A primary reason is his handpicked schools chancellor, Carmen Fariña.
Fariña is a celebrated educator, but good educators are not necessarily good leaders. She may be comfortable in a classroom, but she’s clearly in over her head when it comes to running a system with a million students. Here are her main weaknesses:
Vision. Her piloting of the system is opaque and sloppy. Her central idea is a “capacity framework” that “fundamentally changes” schools through values such as “honor[ing] the fact that students are more than just a test score” and “bring[ing] together the strengths of schools and their communities.”
She’s got progressive jargon, not a strategy.
Competence. Her oversight of low-performing Renewal Schools has been ruinous. Her team wasn’t even able to release the Renewal plan until two months after the program was scheduled to start. Nor did she publish academic targets for the schools until more than a year into the program, and only after Chalkbeat reported that she had refused to release them. And it soon became clear why.
Goals touted as “rigorous” turned out to be absurdly easy to meet — for example, giving schools three years to meet targets designed for one year. Fariña validated low expectations and failure for disadvantaged students while making it more likely that the initiative — and administration — will appear successful when goals are met.
A year and a half in, the only achievement that Fariña has been willing to cite is a decline in chronic absenteeism.
Rigor. Meanwhile, Fariña reinstituted the centralized command-and-control structure of the past — shifting authority away from principals and back to superintendents who report to her — ending a decade of gains in school autonomy and accountability.
Fariña doesn’t rely on evidence in making these decisions. She requires Renewal schools to use her favored reading program even after a study found poor students performed better using a different program.
She dismissed four-year randomized trials showing that the Bloomberg-era small schools produced large student gains as merely “one view of things.” She suggested that charters push out low-performing students before state tests and then refused to provide evidence or to retract.
Urgency. Nearly 80 percent of city high-school graduates attending community college require remedial coursework. About 10,000 Hispanic and 7,000 black students who should have graduated in 2015 — roughly one-third of each cohort — either dropped out or are still in school with diminishing odds of success.
Fariña echoes a time when education was even less organized to serve the interests of children, a feeling driven home by a recent report in The Post that at least one old-fashioned “rubber room” — in which teachers accused of misconduct spend their time, on full pay — has resumed operation in Queens under her watch.
Of course, Fariña was hired in the first place because she was willing to maintain common cause with the teachers union and lend her credibility to City Hall-driven initiatives like pre-K.
Appointing Fariña was a safe political choice for the mayor — at the time. Now he needs to get serious.
Facing an oppositional governor and Republican caucus in Albany, a union president publicly predicting failure and mayoral control ending in six months — not to mention the potential for a humiliating state takeover of city schools under a new receivership law — de Blasio must show results, and fast.
Will he be enough of his own man to bring in a big thinker, someone who knows what citywide improvement looks like and can convince people it’s possible?
With due respect for her service, that person is not Carmen Fariña.
Campbell Brown is the co-founder and editor-in-chief of The 74, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news site covering education in America.


New York City Schools Chancellor
The New York City Schools Chancellor is chairperson of the New York City Board of Education (Panel for Educational Policy) and leader of the New York City Department of Education, the agency that handles New York City's public schools. The Chancellor's formal title is Chancellor of the New York City Department of Education. The current Chancellor is Carmen Fariña.
Contents
   
·         4References
·         5Further reading
History of position under city Board of Education[edit]
While searching for a permanent Superintendent of Schools in 1970 for Nathan Brown, the Board of Education named Irving Anker to serve as Acting Superintendent until the position was filled. The Board had approached, and been turned down by, such notables as Ralph Bunche, Ramsey Clark, Arthur J. Goldberg and Sargent Shriver, before choosing Harvey B. Scribner, who had been Commissioner of the Vermont Department of Education and superintendent of the Teaneck Public Schools, where he oversaw the implementation of a voluntary school integration program.[1]
Citing what he called a "confidence gap" with the Board of Education, Scribner announced in December 1972 that he would leave his post as Chancellor when his three-year contract ended on June 30, 1973.[2] Before going on a terminal vacation starting on April 1, 1973, Chancellor Scribner named Anker, then Deputy Chancellor, to serve as Acting Chancellor.[3] Anker was then named permanent Chancellor in June 1973.[4]
After taking office in January 1978 as Mayor of New York, Ed Koch forced out Anker as Chancellor in favor of Frank Macchiarola, a key Koch advisor who had been a vice president of the CUNY Graduate Center and deputy director of the New York State Emergency Financial Control Board for New York City; Anker would serve until his contract ended on June 30, 1978.[5]
Alvarado was named as Chancellor in April 1983, the city's first Hispanic Chancellor.[6] Alvarado resigned as School Chancellor in May 1984 in the wake of professional misconduct charges, including allegations that he had borrowed $80,000 from employees in coercive fashion. Nathan Quinones was selected as Chancellor, having served in the position on an interim basis after Alvarado placed himself on leave two months earlier.[7]
Quinones was pressured to resign in 1987, in the face of criticism for his management of the district and its finances, with mayoral candidate Carol Bellamy saying that he "consistently failed to provide the leadership or sound management we need".[8]
Harold O. Levy was the last Chancellor to be selected directly by the Board of Education, serving during the final years of Mayor Rudy Giuliani and the early part of the Bloomberg administration.
History of position under Mayoral control[edit]
Joel Klein was named as Chancellor in July 2002 by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the first to be named in the reorganized system in which the Mayor of New York was given direct control of the Board of Education.[9]
In November 2010, Cathie Black was named as the first female Chancellor by Mayor Michael Bloomberg.[10] Because of her lack of educational experience and administrative licensing, Black required a waiver from the Commissioner of Education of the State of New York, who at that time was David M. Steiner, in order to take office.[11] The waiver was issued, and Black took office on January 3, 2011.[12]
List of New York City Schools Chancellors[edit]
Individuals who have led the New York City school system include:[13]
·         Carmen Fariña 2014–Present
·         Dennis Walcott 2011–2013
·         Cathie Black 2011
·         Joel Klein 2002-2010
·         Harold O. Levy 2000-2002
·         Dr. Rudy Crew 1995-1999
·         Ramon C. Cortines 1993-1995
·         Dr. Harvey Garner (Interim) July - August 1993
·         Dr. Joseph A. Fernandez 1990-1993
·         Bernard Mecklowitz 1989
·         Dr. Richard Green 1988-1989
·         Dr. Charles I. Schonhaut 1988
·         Nathan Quinones 1984-1987
·         Anthony J. Alvarado 1983-1984
·         Richard F. Halverson 1983
·         Frank Macchiarola 1978-1983
·         Harvey B. Scribner 1970-1973
·         Irving Anker 1970, 1973–1978
·         Nathan Brown 1969-1970
·         Calvin E. Gross 1963-1965
·         Bernard E. Donovon 1962-1963, 1965–1969
·         John J. Theobald 1958-1962
·         William Jansen 1947-1958
·         John E. Wade 1942-1947
·         Harold G. Campbell 1934-1942
·         William J. O’Shea 1924-1934
·         William L. Ettinger 1918-1924

·         William H. Maxwell 1898-1918

The U.S. celebrates those who steal, extort or violate the integrity of their office:
Image result for Anthony Alvarado
Anthony Alvarado

MAN IN THE NEWS; AN INNOVATIVE SCHOOL ADMINISTRATOR: ANTHONY JOHN ALVARADO


A month ago Anthony J. Alvarado did not believe he had the slightest chance of becoming the head of the largest public school system in the country. Yesterday the Board of Education selected him as Schools Chancellor, and celebrations erupted in Mr. Alvarado's East Harlem office, where he has served as school superintendent of District 4 for the last decade.
Mr. Alvarado, who will be 41 years old in June, has won his share of accolades for the innovations he has brought to the schools of East Harlem, where most of his 14,000 students are black or Hispanic.
He has created schools within schools, so-called mini-schools. These schools focus on a particular area, such as dance, music or art. Mr. Alvarado says his mini-schools have become so successful they attract children from outside District 4.
In 1981, Mr. Alvarado received a $5,000 tax-free prize from the Fund for the City of New York, which honors city officials it considers outstanding achievers. The number of children who could read at or above grade level in the district rose from 25 percent in 1979 to 48 percent in 1982, a leap that led educators to heap praise upon Mr. Alvarado's leadership abilities.
In redesigning District 4, Mr. Alvarado, who is Hispanic, has realigned the leadership of his schools, placing many Hispanic teachers in supervisory posts. This has led to charges of discrimination against him and his school board.
In 1975, the State Division of Human Rights held that Mr. Alvarado and his school board had discriminated against Samuel Peyer, who is white and was then the acting principal of Public School 171. Mr.Alvarado had replaced Mr. Peyer with Elsa Lurie, a native of Puerto Rico. Mr. Peyer sued, and the state eventually ordered that Mr. Peyer be reinstated.
''I was given back pay and my seniority,'' said Mr. Peyer, who is now the principal of Public School 124 in South Ozone Park, Queens. Other Complaints Cited
Ted Elsberg, the president of the Council of Supervisors and Administrators, the supervisors' union, said there had been other discrimination complaints by assistant principals and principals in District 4.
''We have acted on these complaints,'' he said. ''We have had our differences with Superintendent Alvarado in the past, but we look forward to having a good working relationship with him.''
In 1977, Irving Anker, then the Schools Chancellor, said Mr. Alvarado had too many highly paid supervisors in his district.Mr. Alvarado defended his hiring practices, saying they were a necessary part of the district's philosophy of creating smaller schools for students whose educational needs had been neglected in the past. He maintained that he was not spending more money than other district superintendents. In recent years, however, he has gone over his budget.
Mr. Alvarado said his guiding philosophy in running a school district was ''to increase the expectation of success'' for pupils and teachers alike. Sense of Accomplishment
He says that the way to rebuild the school system with its nearly one million students is to instill a sense of accomplishment among students and teachers. He has pledged to help restore the vitality of the city's high schools, which are supervised by the central Board of Education and not by the city's 32 school districts.
Anthony John Alvarado was born in the South Bronx on June 10, 1942, the son of a factory worker. He attended St. Anselm's Catholic School, Fordham Preparatory School and Fordham College, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in English in 1960. He later was awarded a Master of Arts degree in English from Fordham University and has also taken education courses at Hunter College.
He began his career as a teacher in the public schools in 1965 and with the exception of a brief stint at the City University, has remained in the system.
He taught English, first as a substitute teacher in the Bronx, and then for one year at James Monroe High School in the Bronx. He quickly rose through a series of administrative posts, first at the board's headquarters in Brooklyn and then in District 9 in the South Bronx. He became the superintendent of District 4, on Oct. 1, 1973. Wife Is Community Liaison Aide
He is married to Ellen Kirshbaum, who once headed Distict 4's East Harlem Performing Arts School. She now works as a community liaison for the district, she said yesterday.
The Alvarados live in a brownstone in Park Slope, Brooklyn, with their children, Rachel, 4 1/2, and Emily, 18 months old. Mr. Alvarado has two daughters from a previous marriage, Maria, 13, and Gloria, 11.
Miss Kirshbaum said yesterday that with two careers, theirs is an ''egalitarian household.'' They divide responsibilities and her husband often does the marketing. On occasion, Mr. Alvarado plays a little racquetball, she said.
Mostly, he likes to read in his spare time, she said. ''He is an avid, unbelievably fast reader,'' Miss Kirshbaum said. ''He has been studying the Civil War for a long, long time.''

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