Seeking
to better define and secure the essential resources, supports, and services
students need, even in times of fiscal constraint, the Campaign for Education
Equity, Teachers College, Columbia University, convened two important
conferences in Albany and New York City earlier this month. At these
events, the group released “Reviewing
Resources,” a preliminary
report on the availability of basic educational resources in high-needs New
York City schools.
Although
the decisions of New York’s highest court in Campaign for Educational Equity (CFE)
v. State of New York had
led the legislature to enact funding reforms that promised high need districts
throughout the state substantial funding increases, the governor and the
legislature have reneged on these commitments. This year’s state aid budget cut
over $2 billion in education funding. The Campaign’s conferences convened educators,
parents, advocates, school officials, public officials, CBOs, and others to
consider the impact on students’ constitutional right to the opportunity for a
sound basic education and to deliberate on specific requirements that the
state—or possibly the court—should adopt to ensure the availability of
sufficient resources, even in hard economic times.
The conference participants largely agreed that defining the
programmatic and resource requirements needed to provide all students a
meaningful opportunity to a sound basic education is “frustrating and
difficult,” but that it is an essential step for ensuring that all students
obtain the skills and knowledge to become capable citizens and competitive
workers in the global economy. The Campaign intends to release a summary of the
specific positions and ideas articulated by the conference shortly.
The “Reviewing Resources” report discusses preliminary
findings based on informational interviews in 34 high-needs New York City
schools (and includes in-depth interviews in four pilot schools). In the vast
majority of these schools, principals and teachers who were interviewed
reported substantial gaps in their ability to provide (1) a suitable curriculum
for all students; (2) an expanded platform of services for at risk students;
(3) resources for improving teacher quality; and (4) a safe, orderly
environment that provides a supportive climate for learning. Virtually none of
the 34 schools reported, for example, that they were able to provide all of their
eligible students with the full range of academic intervention services
required by state regulations, and a number of high schools reported that they
unable to provide students with basic courses in chemistry and physics or with advanced
courses in many subjects.