Getting Better All the Time
Getting Better All the Time
TC solidifies its status as the top center for education policy
If there is a single image that sums up the evolution of policy studies at TC over the past few years, it's The Pyramid.
That’s the simple graphic that adorns the home page of the new education policy studies Web site (launched in September 2007): a triangle divided into three shaded areas. Roll your mouse over the bottom and you can check out every individual policy-related class offered by TC’s star-studded cast of policy faculty (Henry Levin, Jeanne Brooks Gunn, Arlene Ackerman, Michael Rebell, Sharon Lynn Kagan, Thomas Bailey, Jeffrey Henig, Jay Heubert, Amy Stuart Wells, Edmund W. Gordon, and more). Roll it over the middle to learn how policy can be integrated into the various other degree programs. Roll it over the top and you can explore concentrations devoted to policy itself.
"This has always been an incredibly policy-rich environment," says Kagan, who was named TC's first Associate Dean for Policy and head of the newly created Office of Policy and Research (OPR) in 2004. "Now we’re making it an easier place to navigate, and that’s one more reason why we’re becoming the institute of choice both for users of policy research and for policy students."
During the past three years, Kagan – who has advised federal and state leaders, as well as nations around the world, on policy in her specialty area of early childhood education –and faculty members Luis Huerta and Douglas Ready, who serve as policy coordinators, have overseen an exhaustive inventorying of all policy courses at the College and how they interrelate. They've also launched the birth of the Policy Students Network, now nearly 300 strong; created a calendar of events that includes the annual Policy Orientation Panel that's now held early in the fall semester; initiated the Brown Bag lunch series featuring luminaries from both TC and other institutions; and will hold the first annual Iscol Symposium next month in conjunction with TC's Politics and Education Program, featuring Frederick Hess, Director of Education Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute; Patrick McGuinn, one of the authors of the federal No Child Left Behind Act; and Wendy Pureifoy, President of the Public Education Network.
"OPR isn't just a leadership office that makes top-down decisions, we're a collaborative center that tries to connect up the work of different academic areas so that everyone benefits," Kagan says.
This year also
marks the third cohort of TC Policy Fellows – doctoral students, both new and
returning, who receive $6,000 stipends to explore topics ranging from
"electrophysiological measures of speech perception abilities in
Spanish-English late bilinguals" to "Integration and Compensation:
the Impact of Federal Court Decisions on Redistributive Education Reform in
Urban School Districts." And last spring, the first TC Policy Interns – a program
created by Huerta and doctoral student Allison Roda – were deployed to
organizations across
All of which seems to be not only improving the policy climate at TC, but also enabling the College to attract the highest caliber students.
"Being
selected for the Policy Fellowship was definitely a major factor in my choosing
to stay in
"A major draw was President Fuhrman's interest in connecting research and policy, which is perfect for someone like me who wants to straddle both worlds," says Gyurko, whose research will focus on the impact of war metaphors and framing on education reform-'"an interest he shares with faculty member Jeffrey Henig.
"It's great to look down the list of faculty and see names I know from my work-'"people like Henig and Michael Rebell," he says.
Policy Intern Jennifer Stillman, a doctoral student in Politics and Education, has valued her time at TC for the opposite reason: the opportunity it's afforded her to connect with education leaders outside the College. Stillman's 10-week internship this past summer was with New Visions for Schools, one of the many non-profits around the City that has contracted with DOE to act as a school support organization.
"They're
going to be serving 63 schools, and they're really starting from scratch. They
don't know what the principals at those schools are going to want from them, so
they asked me and other interns to do research on that," says Stillman, a
former teacher who also worked in the early 1990s for current Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid of
Stillman, who is about to give birth to her second child, says she isn't always able to attend all the different events that now fill TC's policy calendar even though she sees its calendar as "really valuable, especially for people who are younger than me who don't know what they want to do," she says. "I'm always aware of what's happening, though, so I would say they're doing a really good job of reaching out."
Published Thursday, Oct. 18, 2007