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Wikipedia

Susan Fuhrman

Susan Harriet Fuhrman (born April 1944) is an American education policy scholar and served from 2006[1][2] as the first female president of Teachers College, Columbia University.[3] Fuhrman earned her doctorate in Political Science and Education from Columbia University. She is an authority on school reform.

Susan Fuhrman
Born
Susan Harriet Fuhrman

1944 (age 79–80)
The Bronx, New York, U.S.
Known forfounding Consortium for Policy Research in Education
Board member ofNational Academy of Education president 2009–2013
Academic background
EducationNorthwestern University (BA, MA)
Columbia University (PhD)
ThesisThe Classification of Roll Call Votes in New Jersey (1977)
Academic work
Institutions
Main interests

Fuhrman served as the Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education for 11 years,[4] where she is widely credited with elevating Penn GSE to enhanced national stature by "focusing on themes of urban and international education and broadening involvement with schools in underserved communities..."[5] Prior to her service as dean at Pennsylvania, Fuhrman taught at Rutgers University and founded the Consortium for Policy Research in Education, the nation's first federally funded education policy center.[6]

In 2007 Fuhrman was named one of New York's 100 most influential women by Crain's New York Business.[7] In 2009, she also became president of the National Academy of Education.[8]

Early life and education edit

Susan Harriet Fuhrman was born in April 1944[9] in the Bronx, the daughter of Irene Satz Levine, who rose from a stock girl to become Vice President of Ohrbach's department store. With a mother and three aunts who were all successful professionals, Fuhrman says, she always “had the model of a woman who was independent and a major figure in whatever field she chose to be in.” [10]

Fuhrman is a graduate of New York City public schools, including Hunter College High School which she graduated from in 1961.[11] She earned her B.A. and M.A. degrees in history from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. After teaching in secondary schools and studying policy planning and administration in the School of Education at the University of California, Berkeley, she received a Ph.D. in political science and education at Teachers College, Columbia University in 1977.[12] Her dissertation was titled, “The Classification of Roll Call Votes in New Jersey.”

Fuhrman's Teachers College advisor and mentor was Donna Shalala, later U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and President of the University of Miami, who enabled Fuhrman and other students to gain real-world experience working with the Connecticut State legislature and a commission appointed by New York Governor Hugh Carey. Fuhrman has credited Shalala for her own subsequent focus on “the interaction of theory and practice” and her lifelong interest in “working closely with policymakers to do practice based on good, research-based advice [10] "

Consortium for Policy Research and Education (CPRE) edit

After completing graduate school, Fuhrman taught public policy at Rutgers’ Eagleton Institute for Politics during the early 1980s. It was there, in 1985, that she founded the Consortium for Policy Research and Education (CPRE), a joint venture among leading schools of education that included scholars such as future U.S. Secretary of Education Richard Riley; Richard Elmore, now the Gregory R. Anrig Professor of Educational Leadership at Harvard; and Marshall Smith, later Undersecretary of Education under President Clinton.

CPRE conducted some of the most influential early analyses of what would become the state education standards movement, critiquing the spate of school reforms enacted following the publication of “A Nation at Risk.” That report famously highlighted the failure of American students to keep pace with their counterparts in Japan, Germany and other countries. CPRE determined that the reforms of the 1980s were fragmented and largely ineffective. In a series of articles and policy briefs, the CPRE group articulated a theory of standards-based reform that called for directly tying text books, teacher preparation and testing to statewide standards for student learning. That vision was adopted by the National Science Foundation, which began funding state systemic initiatives in the late 1980s and 90s, and was subsequently taken up by every major policy association and adopted, to varying degrees, by nearly every state.[13]

“The big shift coming from CPRE was about changing standards from the generic benchmarking that had gone on in the past to something that actually shaped what students were learning in the classroom,” Marshall Smith said in 2007.[13]

While Fuhrman has continued to call for standards that promote deeper learning, she has publicly stated that, with the passage of the federal No Child Left Behind Act and other measures, the standards movement has focused excessively on testing and other accountability measures.

“The early visions of standards-based reform were that states would develop standards and use them to develop curriculum,[14]” she said in an interview in 2013. “Instead, states developed standards and nobody developed curriculum. They commissioned tests, and the test specs became the de facto curriculum, and they were much narrower than a curriculum should be.” For the new Common Core State Standards to be successful, Fuhrman wrote in Education Week in 2009, “educators and policymakers in the states, or in groups of states, will need to flesh out the new standards with curricula that specify desired pathways through the subject matter that will lead to mastery of the standards.”[15]

University of Pennsylvania edit

In 1995 Fuhrman was named Dean of the University of Pennsylvania's Graduate School of Education (Penn GSE) and the school's George and Diane Weiss Professor of Education. Her scholarship focused on enhancing the quality of education research, accountability in education, standards-based reform and intergovernmental relationships.[16] Her published books during this period included Designing Coherent Education Policy (1993); Redesigning Accountability Systems for Education (2004), co-edited with Richard Elmore; and “The State of Education Policy Research,” co-authored with David Cohen and Fritz Mosher (2006).[17]

As Dean of Penn GSE, Fuhrman was seen “as a driving force in the School’s increased engagement in local urban schools and in international education. Her dedication to rigorous research and practical reform was reflected in the quadrupling of externally funded research at GSE” and when she left for Teachers College, almost half of the School's standing tenure track faculty had been hired during her tenure.”[18]

Fuhrman broadened Penn GSE’s involvement with schools in under-served communities in West Philadelphia. Under University of Pennsylvania President Judith Rodin, Fuhrman spearheaded the creation of the Sadie Tanner Mosell Alexander School, a university-backed pre-K-8 public school named for the first African-American woman to receive a law degree at the University of Pennsylvania. The school sends most of its graduates on to selective high schools.

Following the state takeover of the Philadelphia school system, Fuhrman also led Penn GSE in setting up partnerships with three low-performing schools in its West Philadelphia neighborhood, where it has been able to drive significant gains in student achievement.[18] This work convinced Fuhrman that universities in general are ideal partners for local public schools.

Teachers College edit

Fuhrman became the first female President of Teachers College in spring 2006, but she sounded the themes that would guide her administration the year before in a keynote speech delivered at the annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.

“We cannot demonstrate that we have a sound knowledge base for teacher education, that we know how to prepare teachers well, and that our preparation is essential for good teaching,” she said. “We must take responsibility for shoring up the research base, for providing evidence about effectiveness that will enable us to assure that our practices are sound.” [19]

In an interview with the New York Times, Dr. Fuhrman said that she intended to bring some of CPRE's work on school reform and management to Teachers College, and that she hoped to expand the college's involvement with New York's public school system.[20]

Research, Practice and Policy Goals edit

Teachers College has hired more than 50 new tenure-track faculty members since Fuhrman's arrival, representing roughly one-third of its current faculty. An in-house seed fund has backed more than 100 cross-disciplinary faculty research projects. During that same period, TC has launched new programs in learning analytics, diabetes care and management, executive change management, creative technologies, global competence in teaching, and spirituality and psychology. And the college has seen a 30% rise in financial aid and the beginning of doctoral support efforts.

Following up on her public school outreach at Penn, Fuhrman, in one of her first acts at Teachers College, established a new Office of School and Community Partnerships to centralize the college's work in New York City. In 2011 TC created the Teachers College Community School in West Harlem, which reflects the input of TC faculty in math, science, music, psychology, nutrition, reading and writing, physical education and art. TC students serve as specialty and pre-service teachers, after-school instructors, classroom assistants and psychological counseling and literacy interns. In 2013–14, 85 percent of students at TCCS performed at or above grade level in literacy in math, and the school led its district in applications for kindergarten seats.[21]

TCCS now anchors REACH (Raising Educational Achievement Coalition of Harlem), through which TC partners with six local K-12 public to help improve educational outcomes for children.

Another top priority for Fuhrman at TC has been the expansion of the college's international alliances, particularly working together with Columbia University's Centers of Global Excellence. In 2009, Fuhrman created a new Office of International Affairs., through which TC has launched major partnerships with Jordan's Queen Rania Teacher Academy, the Khemka Foundation in India, China's Beijing University; and Pakistan's Ministry of Education.[22]

In 2011, the college created a new Department of Education Policy and Social Analysis (EPSA) as a central hub for education policy faculty who had been scattered across a range of disciplines and departments. EPSA houses four masters and doctoral programs – Economics and Education, Politics and Education, and Sociology and Education and the college's Leadership Policy and Politics program – and collaborates extensively with other units of the college.[23] The department is also home to the college's Annual Phyllis L. Kossoff Lecture on Education and Policy, which has included a debate between the two presidential nominees’ education advisers in fall 2012; a major policy address by U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan; a roundtable featuring New York State Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch (Ed.D. ’05); and policy addresses by two New York City public school chancellors — Dennis Walcott in 2011 and Carmen Fariña in 2014.

In fall 2013, Fuhrman announced the launch of an historic $300 million campaign – “Where the Future Comes First: The Campaign for Teachers College” – the largest campaign ever undertaken for a graduate school of education. Financial support for students is the highest priority. As of April, 2015, the Campaign was just shy of the $200 million mark, including more than $48 million raised to support student scholarships and fellowships.

Faculty Controversy Leads to Increased Diversity Efforts edit

At the start of Fuhrman's tenure as Teachers College President in August, 2006, she faced a contentious set of issues involving Professor Madonna Constantine, who had been Chair of the Department of Counseling and Clinical Psychology. When Constantine went on sabbatical in January 2006, faculty had elected Suniya S. Luthar to replace her. Luthar was told of several instances of plagiarism by Constantine, and had conveyed these to the Dean at the time, Darlyne Bailey. As Bailey left Teachers College for the University of Minnesota and Fuhrman took over as president, Fuhrman hired an external team of lawyers to investigate charges against Constantine.[24][25] Reportedly, the investigation was handled by a law firm rather than a faculty committee because the administration feared that any missteps could open the college to litigation.[26]

After months of investigation, the law firm spoke to Constantine in August 2007 to get her version of the story. A few months later as the college was close to releasing results of the investigation,[25] a noose appeared on Constantine's office door. Someone blamed Luthar to the police and media.[24][27][28] Fuhrman told the New York Times that she had "heard nothing but accolades" about Professor Constantine from her students.[29] Regarding Luthar, Fuhrman told the New York Post that "the dispute between the two women...started more than a year ago. I’m not going to speculate on this investigation and its connection to this [incident]. I’d be outraged and horrified if it was connected.” [30] Several days later, Fuhrman expressed regret, in her State of the college address, that "...in an effort to protect (Professor Luthar's) privacy, and under legal advice not to comment about her in response to any questions about the incident, even when asked specifically about her -- we didn't offer her the public support she deserves".[31][32]

In February 2008, conclusions from an 18-month investigation by the law firm were that Madonna Constantine had in fact plagiarized the work of others.[33] Reprimanded for multiple instances of plagiarism,[34] Constantine was to face unspecified sanctions at the college.[35]

In a formal grievance to the Teachers College Faculty Advisory Committee (FAC) dated March 11. 2008, Constantine indicated that she was exercising her right to appeal both the law firm's findings and the college's sanctions, and she alleged unequal treatment by President Fuhrman. The FAC conducted their own investigatory process between March and May 2008, and in a written document dated June 4, 2008, indicated that Constantine's appeal was not "substantiated." [36] In a letter dated June 12, 2008, Constantine's appointment at Teachers College was officially terminated.[36][37]

Constantine filed a lawsuit against Teachers College in October 2008, alleging that her termination was "arbitrary, irrational, and unauthorized,"[38] but the suit was "disposed". She then filed a defamation lawsuit against Teachers College in April 2009.[39] In March 2010, she lost one of three lawsuits against the college.[40] In March, 2012 — six years after concerns about plagiarism were first raised at Teachers College—the New York State Supreme Court affirmed the dismissal of Madonna Constantine's defamation lawsuits against Teachers College and others.[41]

Following these incidents, Fuhrman focused the school more intensely on improving the climate around diversity. Building on the previous work of its Office for Diversity and Community Affairs, the college instituted sensitivity training and held town hall meetings. More recently TC has introduced a new certificate program in Sexuality, Women & Gender and a concentration in bilingual, Latina/o mental health services.

Issues Regarding Bonuses and Board Membership edit

At a faculty meeting in May 2013, the Teachers College faculty voted to reject the college's proposed 2013-2014 budget. [42] This vote arose from the discovery, by TC's Faculty Executive Committee, that senior administrators were to receive bonuses from the college's 2011-12 budget surplus, with a total amount of $315,000 to be distributed. Of this amount, Fuhrman reportedly was to receive $90,000, and Vice President for Finance and Administration Harvey Spector was to receive $50,000. Some faculty and students voiced opposition to the proposed bonuses, especially in light of the administration's proposal to include a tuition increase of 4.5% in the budget for the 2013-14 fiscal year [42]

Soon after the May 2013 faculty meeting, a group of students wrote a letter [43] strongly criticizing President Fuhrman for her association with the for-profit company Pearson Education, and for her decision to bestow a 2013 Medal for Distinguished Services to NYS Board of Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch who has been a proponent of standardized testing. At that time, Fuhrman serves on Pearson's board, and reportedly owned $272,088 in Pearson stock in May 2013.[42] New York State's had recently adopted Pearson's Teacher Performance Assessment in order to be considered for certification, with each teacher's assessment entailing a fee of $300 to Pearson.[44] When Merryl Tisch spoke at the 2013 graduation ceremonies, some students staged a quiet protest, holding up signs that said, “NOT A TEST SCORE.” [45]

Fuhrman's responses to these various concerns were delineated in a letter sent to the Teachers College community.[45] She noted that performance-based bonuses are common at colleges across the country and at TC, bonuses are calculated and awarded "solely by the Board of Trustees and not by the administrators"; at the same time, she indicated that during "this times of financial uncertainty", she would ask the Trustees to forgo giving bonuses to her and other senior staff. Regarding her service on the Pearson board which ended at the close of her term in 2013, Fuhrman indicated that the TC Board of Trustees had reviewed this service (which had commenced before her tenure as TC president), and believed that it was beneficial for educators' perspectives to be represented in private sector entities involved in education. Regarding the medal for Tisch, she said, "Whether one agrees with specific aspects of the chancellor’s policies, her positive impact on the lives of New Yorkers is evident in her many accomplishments in public education over the years as well as her enormous contributions in health, human services, and the arts." [45]

National Academy of Education edit

Fuhrman served as President of the National Academy of Education (NAEd) from 2009 to 2013, succeeding Lorrie Shepard of the University of Colorado at Boulder. She convened a national conversation in the new field of learning analytics, which seeks to mine and analyze data generated by adaptive education technologies. In a series of meetings that drew scholars and researchers from all over the world, Fuhrman sought to establish a common framework for sharing and analyzing this wealth of information, and for protecting the privacy of students and their families.[46]

References edit

  1. ^ "Susan Fuhrman, Authority on School Reform, Next Pres. of Teachers College". www.newswise.com. Retrieved 2023-05-13.
  2. ^ "Most Powerful Women - Susan Fuhrman". Crain's New York Business. 2018-07-20. Retrieved 2023-05-13.
  3. ^ , Teachers College, Columbia University, Its first president, archived from the original on 2007-06-11, retrieved 2009-10-08
  4. ^ Steinberg, Julie (May 12, 2006), "GSE dean quits to take N.Y. post: Susan Fuhrman will be Columbia Teachers College's new leader after 11 years at Penn", Daily Pennsylvanian, archived from the original on May 14, 2007
  5. ^ "Susan Fuhrman, Authority on School Reform, Is New Columbia Teachers College President", Columbia News, May 10, 2006
  6. ^ Ahles, Andrea (January 18, 1995), "Rutgers prof appointed as GSE dean", Daily Pennsylvanian[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Traster, Tina (October 1, 2007), "A leader of those who teach (100 Most Influential Women)", Crain's New York Business
  8. ^ Resmovits, Joy (October 5, 2009), "TC Professor to Lead National Academy of Education", Columbia Spectator
  9. ^ "Pearson PLC". Companies House. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  10. ^ a b "Steady as She Goes". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  11. ^ Saulny, Susan (2006-05-10). "Educator from Penn Will Lead Columbia's Teachers College". New York Times. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  12. ^ "Putting Standards to the Test". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  13. ^ a b "Steady as She Goes". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  14. ^ "Putting Standards to the Test". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  15. ^ Fuhrman, Resnick & Shepard (10 October 2009). "Standards Aren't Enough". Education Week. Education Week. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  16. ^ "New GSE Dean: Susan Fuhrman of Rutgers" (PDF). Penn Almanac. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  17. ^ "GSE Dean Fuhrman Steps Down". Penn Almanac. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  18. ^ a b "GSE Dean Fuhrman Steps Down". Penn Almanac. Univ of PA. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  19. ^ "Susan H. Fuhrman, Authority on School Reform, Is Next President of Teachers College, Columbia University". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  20. ^ Saulny, Susan (2006-05-10). "Educator from Penn Will Lead Columbia's Teachers College". New York Times. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  21. ^ Lamiell, Patricia. "A School Where Dreams Come True". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  22. ^ "Talking Shop with Portia Williams". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  23. ^ Lamiell, Patricia. "The Best Policy". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  24. ^ a b Rayman, Graham (2008-07-02). "Columbia's Knotty Noose Problem". Village Voice. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  25. ^ a b [1] November 11, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Jaschik, Scott (2008-02-21). "Victim, Victimizer or Both?". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  27. ^ [2] June 11, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ "NYPD probes tapes in Columbia noose case". Usatoday.Com. 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  29. ^ Gootman, E (October 12, 2007). "Noose Case Puts Focus on a Scholar of Race". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  30. ^ Gregorian, Dareh (2007-10-11). "Sleuths Seek To Quiz Rival In 'Smear' | New York Post". Nypost.com. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  31. ^ "Transcript of the State of the College Address | TC Media Center". Tc.columbia.edu. 2007-10-19. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  32. ^ "Columbia Defends Professor In Noose Incident, After Delay - The New York Sun". Nysun.com. 2007-10-23. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  33. ^ Wileden, Lydia (2008-02-20). "TC Prof Sanctioned for Fraud". Columbiaspectator.com. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  34. ^ "Investigation Finds That Columbia U. Professor Plagiarized Repeatedly - Faculty - The Chronicle of Higher Education". Chronicle.com. 2008-02-20. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  35. ^ Chan, S (2008). "Professor in noose case is cited for plagiarism". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  36. ^ a b "Constantine v Teachers Coll. :: 2010 :: New York Other Courts Decisions :: New York Case Law :: New York Law :: U.S. Law :: Justia". Law.justia.com. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  37. ^ Santoro, M (June 24, 2008). "Columbia Professor in Noose Case Is Fired on Plagiarism Charges". The New York Times.
  38. ^ Maggie Astor, "Fired Professor Madonna Constantine Sues Columbia" 2008-10-15 at the Wayback Machine, Columbia Spectator, 10 October 2008
  39. ^ Joy Resmovitz, "Constantine files TC defamation complaint", Columbia Spectator, 22 April 2009
  40. ^ "Constantine loses first suit against Teachers College" 2010-05-28 at the Wayback Machine, Columbia Spectator, 3 March 2010
  41. ^ "Ex-Professor Loses Bid to Revive Defamation Claim", New York Law Journal, 14 March 2012
  42. ^ a b c Reyes, Cecilia (2013-05-10). "Teachers College faculty vote not to support proposed 2013-14 budget". Columbiaspectator.com. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  43. ^ "Teachers College Student Reply to Fuhrman". Scribd.com. 2013-06-13. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  44. ^ Reyes, C. (June 12, 2013) In letter, Teachers College students slam TC President Susan Fuhrman letter-teachers-college-students-slam-tc-president-susan-fuhrman
  45. ^ a b c Strauss, Valerie (2013-05-21). "Quiet protest staged at Teachers College graduation". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  46. ^ Levine, Joseph. "Gold Rush! New Technology Mines Students Minds". Teachers College, Columbia University. Retrieved 8 May 2015.

External links edit

    susan, fuhrman, susan, harriet, fuhrman, born, april, 1944, american, education, policy, scholar, served, from, 2006, first, female, president, teachers, college, columbia, university, fuhrman, earned, doctorate, political, science, education, from, columbia, . Susan Harriet Fuhrman born April 1944 is an American education policy scholar and served from 2006 1 2 as the first female president of Teachers College Columbia University 3 Fuhrman earned her doctorate in Political Science and Education from Columbia University She is an authority on school reform Susan FuhrmanBornSusan Harriet Fuhrman1944 age 79 80 The Bronx New York U S Known forfounding Consortium for Policy Research in EducationBoard member ofNational Academy of Education president 2009 2013Academic backgroundEducationNorthwestern University BA MA Columbia University PhD ThesisThe Classification of Roll Call Votes in New Jersey 1977 Academic workInstitutionsColumbia UniversityUniversity of PennsylvaniaMain interestsEducational equitySchool reformFuhrman served as the Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education for 11 years 4 where she is widely credited with elevating Penn GSE to enhanced national stature by focusing on themes of urban and international education and broadening involvement with schools in underserved communities 5 Prior to her service as dean at Pennsylvania Fuhrman taught at Rutgers University and founded the Consortium for Policy Research in Education the nation s first federally funded education policy center 6 In 2007 Fuhrman was named one of New York s 100 most influential women by Crain s New York Business 7 In 2009 she also became president of the National Academy of Education 8 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Consortium for Policy Research and Education CPRE 3 University of Pennsylvania 4 Teachers College 4 1 Research Practice and Policy Goals 4 2 Faculty Controversy Leads to Increased Diversity Efforts 4 3 Issues Regarding Bonuses and Board Membership 4 4 National Academy of Education 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and education editSusan Harriet Fuhrman was born in April 1944 9 in the Bronx the daughter of Irene Satz Levine who rose from a stock girl to become Vice President of Ohrbach s department store With a mother and three aunts who were all successful professionals Fuhrman says she always had the model of a woman who was independent and a major figure in whatever field she chose to be in 10 Fuhrman is a graduate of New York City public schools including Hunter College High School which she graduated from in 1961 11 She earned her B A and M A degrees in history from Northwestern University in Evanston Illinois After teaching in secondary schools and studying policy planning and administration in the School of Education at the University of California Berkeley she received a Ph D in political science and education at Teachers College Columbia University in 1977 12 Her dissertation was titled The Classification of Roll Call Votes in New Jersey Fuhrman s Teachers College advisor and mentor was Donna Shalala later U S Secretary of Health and Human Services and President of the University of Miami who enabled Fuhrman and other students to gain real world experience working with the Connecticut State legislature and a commission appointed by New York Governor Hugh Carey Fuhrman has credited Shalala for her own subsequent focus on the interaction of theory and practice and her lifelong interest in working closely with policymakers to do practice based on good research based advice 10 Consortium for Policy Research and Education CPRE editAfter completing graduate school Fuhrman taught public policy at Rutgers Eagleton Institute for Politics during the early 1980s It was there in 1985 that she founded the Consortium for Policy Research and Education CPRE a joint venture among leading schools of education that included scholars such as future U S Secretary of Education Richard Riley Richard Elmore now the Gregory R Anrig Professor of Educational Leadership at Harvard and Marshall Smith later Undersecretary of Education under President Clinton CPRE conducted some of the most influential early analyses of what would become the state education standards movement critiquing the spate of school reforms enacted following the publication of A Nation at Risk That report famously highlighted the failure of American students to keep pace with their counterparts in Japan Germany and other countries CPRE determined that the reforms of the 1980s were fragmented and largely ineffective In a series of articles and policy briefs the CPRE group articulated a theory of standards based reform that called for directly tying text books teacher preparation and testing to statewide standards for student learning That vision was adopted by the National Science Foundation which began funding state systemic initiatives in the late 1980s and 90s and was subsequently taken up by every major policy association and adopted to varying degrees by nearly every state 13 The big shift coming from CPRE was about changing standards from the generic benchmarking that had gone on in the past to something that actually shaped what students were learning in the classroom Marshall Smith said in 2007 13 While Fuhrman has continued to call for standards that promote deeper learning she has publicly stated that with the passage of the federal No Child Left Behind Act and other measures the standards movement has focused excessively on testing and other accountability measures The early visions of standards based reform were that states would develop standards and use them to develop curriculum 14 she said in an interview in 2013 Instead states developed standards and nobody developed curriculum They commissioned tests and the test specs became the de facto curriculum and they were much narrower than a curriculum should be For the new Common Core State Standards to be successful Fuhrman wrote in Education Week in 2009 educators and policymakers in the states or in groups of states will need to flesh out the new standards with curricula that specify desired pathways through the subject matter that will lead to mastery of the standards 15 University of Pennsylvania editIn 1995 Fuhrman was named Dean of the University of Pennsylvania s Graduate School of Education Penn GSE and the school s George and Diane Weiss Professor of Education Her scholarship focused on enhancing the quality of education research accountability in education standards based reform and intergovernmental relationships 16 Her published books during this period included Designing Coherent Education Policy 1993 Redesigning Accountability Systems for Education 2004 co edited with Richard Elmore and The State of Education Policy Research co authored with David Cohen and Fritz Mosher 2006 17 As Dean of Penn GSE Fuhrman was seen as a driving force in the School s increased engagement in local urban schools and in international education Her dedication to rigorous research and practical reform was reflected in the quadrupling of externally funded research at GSE and when she left for Teachers College almost half of the School s standing tenure track faculty had been hired during her tenure 18 Fuhrman broadened Penn GSE s involvement with schools in under served communities in West Philadelphia Under University of Pennsylvania President Judith Rodin Fuhrman spearheaded the creation of the Sadie Tanner Mosell Alexander School a university backed pre K 8 public school named for the first African American woman to receive a law degree at the University of Pennsylvania The school sends most of its graduates on to selective high schools Following the state takeover of the Philadelphia school system Fuhrman also led Penn GSE in setting up partnerships with three low performing schools in its West Philadelphia neighborhood where it has been able to drive significant gains in student achievement 18 This work convinced Fuhrman that universities in general are ideal partners for local public schools Teachers College editFuhrman became the first female President of Teachers College in spring 2006 but she sounded the themes that would guide her administration the year before in a keynote speech delivered at the annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education We cannot demonstrate that we have a sound knowledge base for teacher education that we know how to prepare teachers well and that our preparation is essential for good teaching she said We must take responsibility for shoring up the research base for providing evidence about effectiveness that will enable us to assure that our practices are sound 19 In an interview with the New York Times Dr Fuhrman said that she intended to bring some of CPRE s work on school reform and management to Teachers College and that she hoped to expand the college s involvement with New York s public school system 20 Research Practice and Policy Goals edit Teachers College has hired more than 50 new tenure track faculty members since Fuhrman s arrival representing roughly one third of its current faculty An in house seed fund has backed more than 100 cross disciplinary faculty research projects During that same period TC has launched new programs in learning analytics diabetes care and management executive change management creative technologies global competence in teaching and spirituality and psychology And the college has seen a 30 rise in financial aid and the beginning of doctoral support efforts Following up on her public school outreach at Penn Fuhrman in one of her first acts at Teachers College established a new Office of School and Community Partnerships to centralize the college s work in New York City In 2011 TC created the Teachers College Community School in West Harlem which reflects the input of TC faculty in math science music psychology nutrition reading and writing physical education and art TC students serve as specialty and pre service teachers after school instructors classroom assistants and psychological counseling and literacy interns In 2013 14 85 percent of students at TCCS performed at or above grade level in literacy in math and the school led its district in applications for kindergarten seats 21 TCCS now anchors REACH Raising Educational Achievement Coalition of Harlem through which TC partners with six local K 12 public to help improve educational outcomes for children Another top priority for Fuhrman at TC has been the expansion of the college s international alliances particularly working together with Columbia University s Centers of Global Excellence In 2009 Fuhrman created a new Office of International Affairs through which TC has launched major partnerships with Jordan s Queen Rania Teacher Academy the Khemka Foundation in India China s Beijing University and Pakistan s Ministry of Education 22 In 2011 the college created a new Department of Education Policy and Social Analysis EPSA as a central hub for education policy faculty who had been scattered across a range of disciplines and departments EPSA houses four masters and doctoral programs Economics and Education Politics and Education and Sociology and Education and the college s Leadership Policy and Politics program and collaborates extensively with other units of the college 23 The department is also home to the college s Annual Phyllis L Kossoff Lecture on Education and Policy which has included a debate between the two presidential nominees education advisers in fall 2012 a major policy address by U S Secretary of Education Arne Duncan a roundtable featuring New York State Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch Ed D 05 and policy addresses by two New York City public school chancellors Dennis Walcott in 2011 and Carmen Farina in 2014 In fall 2013 Fuhrman announced the launch of an historic 300 million campaign Where the Future Comes First The Campaign for Teachers College the largest campaign ever undertaken for a graduate school of education Financial support for students is the highest priority As of April 2015 the Campaign was just shy of the 200 million mark including more than 48 million raised to support student scholarships and fellowships Faculty Controversy Leads to Increased Diversity Efforts edit At the start of Fuhrman s tenure as Teachers College President in August 2006 she faced a contentious set of issues involving Professor Madonna Constantine who had been Chair of the Department of Counseling and Clinical Psychology When Constantine went on sabbatical in January 2006 faculty had elected Suniya S Luthar to replace her Luthar was told of several instances of plagiarism by Constantine and had conveyed these to the Dean at the time Darlyne Bailey As Bailey left Teachers College for the University of Minnesota and Fuhrman took over as president Fuhrman hired an external team of lawyers to investigate charges against Constantine 24 25 Reportedly the investigation was handled by a law firm rather than a faculty committee because the administration feared that any missteps could open the college to litigation 26 After months of investigation the law firm spoke to Constantine in August 2007 to get her version of the story A few months later as the college was close to releasing results of the investigation 25 a noose appeared on Constantine s office door Someone blamed Luthar to the police and media 24 27 28 Fuhrman told the New York Times that she had heard nothing but accolades about Professor Constantine from her students 29 Regarding Luthar Fuhrman told the New York Post that the dispute between the two women started more than a year ago I m not going to speculate on this investigation and its connection to this incident I d be outraged and horrified if it was connected 30 Several days later Fuhrman expressed regret in her State of the college address that in an effort to protect Professor Luthar s privacy and under legal advice not to comment about her in response to any questions about the incident even when asked specifically about her we didn t offer her the public support she deserves 31 32 In February 2008 conclusions from an 18 month investigation by the law firm were that Madonna Constantine had in fact plagiarized the work of others 33 Reprimanded for multiple instances of plagiarism 34 Constantine was to face unspecified sanctions at the college 35 In a formal grievance to the Teachers College Faculty Advisory Committee FAC dated March 11 2008 Constantine indicated that she was exercising her right to appeal both the law firm s findings and the college s sanctions and she alleged unequal treatment by President Fuhrman The FAC conducted their own investigatory process between March and May 2008 and in a written document dated June 4 2008 indicated that Constantine s appeal was not substantiated 36 In a letter dated June 12 2008 Constantine s appointment at Teachers College was officially terminated 36 37 Constantine filed a lawsuit against Teachers College in October 2008 alleging that her termination was arbitrary irrational and unauthorized 38 but the suit was disposed She then filed a defamation lawsuit against Teachers College in April 2009 39 In March 2010 she lost one of three lawsuits against the college 40 In March 2012 six years after concerns about plagiarism were first raised at Teachers College the New York State Supreme Court affirmed the dismissal of Madonna Constantine s defamation lawsuits against Teachers College and others 41 Following these incidents Fuhrman focused the school more intensely on improving the climate around diversity Building on the previous work of its Office for Diversity and Community Affairs the college instituted sensitivity training and held town hall meetings More recently TC has introduced a new certificate program in Sexuality Women amp Gender and a concentration in bilingual Latina o mental health services Issues Regarding Bonuses and Board Membership edit At a faculty meeting in May 2013 the Teachers College faculty voted to reject the college s proposed 2013 2014 budget 42 This vote arose from the discovery by TC s Faculty Executive Committee that senior administrators were to receive bonuses from the college s 2011 12 budget surplus with a total amount of 315 000 to be distributed Of this amount Fuhrman reportedly was to receive 90 000 and Vice President for Finance and Administration Harvey Spector was to receive 50 000 Some faculty and students voiced opposition to the proposed bonuses especially in light of the administration s proposal to include a tuition increase of 4 5 in the budget for the 2013 14 fiscal year 42 Soon after the May 2013 faculty meeting a group of students wrote a letter 43 strongly criticizing President Fuhrman for her association with the for profit company Pearson Education and for her decision to bestow a 2013 Medal for Distinguished Services to NYS Board of Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch who has been a proponent of standardized testing At that time Fuhrman serves on Pearson s board and reportedly owned 272 088 in Pearson stock in May 2013 42 New York State s had recently adopted Pearson s Teacher Performance Assessment in order to be considered for certification with each teacher s assessment entailing a fee of 300 to Pearson 44 When Merryl Tisch spoke at the 2013 graduation ceremonies some students staged a quiet protest holding up signs that said NOT A TEST SCORE 45 Fuhrman s responses to these various concerns were delineated in a letter sent to the Teachers College community 45 She noted that performance based bonuses are common at colleges across the country and at TC bonuses are calculated and awarded solely by the Board of Trustees and not by the administrators at the same time she indicated that during this times of financial uncertainty she would ask the Trustees to forgo giving bonuses to her and other senior staff Regarding her service on the Pearson board which ended at the close of her term in 2013 Fuhrman indicated that the TC Board of Trustees had reviewed this service which had commenced before her tenure as TC president and believed that it was beneficial for educators perspectives to be represented in private sector entities involved in education Regarding the medal for Tisch she said Whether one agrees with specific aspects of the chancellor s policies her positive impact on the lives of New Yorkers is evident in her many accomplishments in public education over the years as well as her enormous contributions in health human services and the arts 45 National Academy of Education edit Fuhrman served as President of the National Academy of Education NAEd from 2009 to 2013 succeeding Lorrie Shepard of the University of Colorado at Boulder She convened a national conversation in the new field of learning analytics which seeks to mine and analyze data generated by adaptive education technologies In a series of meetings that drew scholars and researchers from all over the world Fuhrman sought to establish a common framework for sharing and analyzing this wealth of information and for protecting the privacy of students and their families 46 References edit Susan Fuhrman Authority on School Reform Next Pres of Teachers College www newswise com Retrieved 2023 05 13 Most Powerful Women Susan Fuhrman Crain s New York Business 2018 07 20 Retrieved 2023 05 13 Faculty Profile Professor Fuhrman Teachers College Columbia University Its first president archived from the original on 2007 06 11 retrieved 2009 10 08 Steinberg Julie May 12 2006 GSE dean quits to take N Y post Susan Fuhrman will be Columbia Teachers College s new leader after 11 years at Penn Daily Pennsylvanian archived from the original on May 14 2007 Susan Fuhrman Authority on School Reform Is New Columbia Teachers College President Columbia News May 10 2006 Ahles Andrea January 18 1995 Rutgers prof appointed as GSE dean Daily Pennsylvanian permanent dead link Traster Tina October 1 2007 A leader of those who teach 100 Most Influential Women Crain s New York Business Resmovits Joy October 5 2009 TC Professor to Lead National Academy of Education Columbia Spectator Pearson PLC Companies House Retrieved 11 August 2015 a b Steady as She Goes Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 7 May 2015 Saulny Susan 2006 05 10 Educator from Penn Will Lead Columbia s Teachers College New York Times Retrieved 7 May 2015 Putting Standards to the Test Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 7 May 2015 a b Steady as She Goes Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 17 January 2019 Putting Standards to the Test Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 17 January 2019 Fuhrman Resnick amp Shepard 10 October 2009 Standards Aren t Enough Education Week Education Week Retrieved 17 January 2019 New GSE Dean Susan Fuhrman of Rutgers PDF Penn Almanac University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 12 May 2015 GSE Dean Fuhrman Steps Down Penn Almanac University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 12 May 2015 a b GSE Dean Fuhrman Steps Down Penn Almanac Univ of PA Retrieved 12 May 2015 Susan H Fuhrman Authority on School Reform Is Next President of Teachers College Columbia University Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 7 May 2015 Saulny Susan 2006 05 10 Educator from Penn Will Lead Columbia s Teachers College New York Times Retrieved 7 May 2015 Lamiell Patricia A School Where Dreams Come True Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 7 May 2015 Talking Shop with Portia Williams Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 7 May 2015 Lamiell Patricia The Best Policy Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 7 May 2015 a b Rayman Graham 2008 07 02 Columbia s Knotty Noose Problem Village Voice Retrieved 2015 08 12 a b 1 Archived November 11 2012 at the Wayback Machine Jaschik Scott 2008 02 21 Victim Victimizer or Both Inside Higher Ed Retrieved 2008 02 23 2 Archived June 11 2008 at the Wayback Machine NYPD probes tapes in Columbia noose case Usatoday Com 2007 10 12 Retrieved 2015 08 12 Gootman E October 12 2007 Noose Case Puts Focus on a Scholar of Race The New York Times Retrieved 2015 08 12 Gregorian Dareh 2007 10 11 Sleuths Seek To Quiz Rival In Smear New York Post Nypost com Retrieved 2015 08 12 Transcript of the State of the College Address TC Media Center Tc columbia edu 2007 10 19 Retrieved 2015 08 12 Columbia Defends Professor In Noose Incident After Delay The New York Sun Nysun com 2007 10 23 Retrieved 2015 08 12 Wileden Lydia 2008 02 20 TC Prof Sanctioned for Fraud Columbiaspectator com Retrieved 2015 08 12 Investigation Finds That Columbia U Professor Plagiarized Repeatedly Faculty The Chronicle of Higher Education Chronicle com 2008 02 20 Retrieved 2015 08 12 Chan S 2008 Professor in noose case is cited for plagiarism The New York Times Retrieved 2008 02 23 a b Constantine v Teachers Coll 2010 New York Other Courts Decisions New York Case Law New York Law U S Law Justia Law justia com Retrieved 2015 08 12 Santoro M June 24 2008 Columbia Professor in Noose Case Is Fired on Plagiarism Charges The New York Times Maggie Astor Fired Professor Madonna Constantine Sues Columbia Archived 2008 10 15 at the Wayback Machine Columbia Spectator 10 October 2008 Joy Resmovitz Constantine files TC defamation complaint Columbia Spectator 22 April 2009 Constantine loses first suit against Teachers College Archived 2010 05 28 at the Wayback Machine Columbia Spectator 3 March 2010 Ex Professor Loses Bid to Revive Defamation Claim New York Law Journal 14 March 2012 a b c Reyes Cecilia 2013 05 10 Teachers College faculty vote not to support proposed 2013 14 budget Columbiaspectator com Retrieved 2015 08 12 Teachers College Student Reply to Fuhrman Scribd com 2013 06 13 Retrieved 2015 08 12 Reyes C June 12 2013 In letter Teachers College students slam TC President Susan Fuhrman letter teachers college students slam tc president susan fuhrman a b c Strauss Valerie 2013 05 21 Quiet protest staged at Teachers College graduation The Washington Post Retrieved 2015 08 12 Levine Joseph Gold Rush New Technology Mines Students Minds Teachers College Columbia University Retrieved 8 May 2015 External links editTeachers College Columbia University Susan Fuhrman Faculty Profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Susan Fuhrman amp oldid 1213241773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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