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New York’s Race to the Top finalist presentation video hits the web

Last month, New York’s Race to the Top delegation traveled to Washington, D.C. to pitch its case for why the state deserved a slice of the $4.3 billion competitive federal grant pool. We already know the result, of course: New York was second-to-last among finalists, and was one of just three states that lost points after the interview round.

But today the U.S. Department of Education posted full videos of the presentation and the subsequent question-and-answer session, so we can now see precisely how the judges framed their questions and how the state defended itself. Many of the judges’ concerns are likely to drive how the state revises its application for the next round of competition.

Many of the questions revolve around how the state plans to build local support for its reforms, and particularly how the state can resolve disagreements between school districts trying to change how teachers are evaluated and teachers unions resisting those changes.

“I actually think it’s great that you are being serious about engaging stakeholders at those local-level conversations, but there will be a point where those conversations get difficult,” one review said. “And the question is, what’s the state going to do then?”

Senior Deputy Chancellor John King responded to one thing the state can do is require that districts use student data as one element in evaluations. Districts and unions would then bargain how heavily the test scores would be weighted.

There’s a lot here to sift through. Now that the weather has returned to a gloomy gray, cuddle up with your laptops and watch; let us know your observations in the comments.

  • http://nyceducator.com NYC Educator

    Boy, looking at those guys sitting around a desk makes me thing this must be the most tedious video of all time. If you want us to “cuddle up and watch,” I think you’re on the wrong track. Watching a bunch of suits explain why they want to be part of one of the most wrong-headed and idiotic programs on God’s green earth just doesn’t get me in the mood.

    I think you’ve finally found a video I find even less attractive than the ones featuring Barney the dinosaur. For that, I have to congratulate you. After a few years watching him and his insipid companions sing, “Row, Row, Row Your Boat,” that’s quite an achievement.

  • http://www.classsizematters.org leonie haimson

    Can you explain who the speakers are? Esp., who is the woman? Also, if there’s anything particularly interesting can you point it out, and what time it happens?
    Who are the questioners? Nice to hear we will have an increase of 76% in enrollment in charter school students even w/out the cap being lifted, an increase of at least 36,000 students.

    Clearly the US Dept. of Ed was very interested in charter cap, despite all their protestations. Love to hear from Bob Hughes about the “enormous trust between principals and teachers” in using data to evaluate teacher performance, via ARIS etc. And the great consensus among community groups for their “turnaround” effort with HS. Perhaps we should send them copies of the video of the recent PEP meetings. Why not have someone else from NYC, they asked, at 28 minutes?

  • Maura Walz

    Hi Leonie — I’m putting together a list of my observations, too, but I wanted to hear our readers’ thoughts as well. In the meantime, here’s the post explaining who the speakers are: http://gothamschools.org/2010/03/12/steiner-king-and-hughes-to-lead-new-yorks-race-to-the-top-team/ The woman is Laura Smith, who works for SED now but was formerly at NYC DOE.

  • Peter

    * The second question dealt with the charter school cap …

    * a whole sequence of questions addressing how the State was going to force the 39% of teacher unions that did not sign the MOU to buy in to assessment based on student performance

    * There was no flow or apparent coherent order to the questions, they jumped all over the place.

    * Did the reviewers read the application? What understanding do they have of NYS?

    * The “where’s Joel” question was a give-away … you lose

    * The panel looked unprepared, Steiner’s answers went on forever, much too professorial.

    * they were looking for a State with a totally topdown system, a State in which the entire Duncan mantra can be rolled out.

    * Since by the June 1 date for submission of phase 2 nothing will have changed, unlikely that the charter cap will be lifted, Joel and Mulgrew will still be dueling … do us all a favor, save the paper.

  • sharon

    this is actually the Q&A, not the presentation itself…which you can find on the USDOE Web site. The winning teams had their governors leading the presentation.

  • Pingback: “What Do You Expect From These Kids,” Can Teachers Accept Responsibility for Their Practice? Can the Department Accept an Empowered Role for Teachers? Are Crises Opportunities? « Ed In The Apple

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