Research


Administrative History

For much of the first half of the 20th century, New York City school governance was characterized by a large central bureaucracy, with administrative and policy-making power centralized in the NYC Board of Education. Local school boards existed only in an advisory capacity, without any true policy-making or administrative powers, and were populated by Board of Education appointees. This system came under increasing criticism in the 1960's as being inefficient and unresponsive to educational needs. Criticism came from elected officials, such as Mayor John Lindsay, and from the Temporary Commission on City Finances, which recommended the creation of separate school boards for each borough of New York. In addition, community organizations and members of racial and ethnic minorities felt that the school system was uninterested and incapable of meeting the specific needs of their children. These latter groups staged protests and boycotts in 1966 in Harlem, particularly around the opening of I.S. 201 high school in East Harlem. They demanded either the integration of these schools through busing, or greater community control over public schools, with community representatives holding the right to hire teachers and principals, and to set the curriculum and educational standards.

In April of 1967, the New York State Legislature passed a bill, later ratified by the Governor, that required Mayor Lindsay to develop a plan for decentralizing the New York City school system, in exchange for greater state educational aid. Lindsay appointed a board of educational experts, headed by Ford Foundation president McGeorge Bundy, to formulate a plan. The plan, released in November, called for the creation of 30 to 60 community school districts in New York City, each controlled by an 11-member community school board. The Lindsay administration and the Board of Education both released plans modifying aspects of the "Bundy plan," reflecting a power struggle between the mayor's office and the board for control over the extent of authority to be given to the community school boards, as well as the ultimate authority over the dispersal of funds for school operations. Meanwhile, in July of 1967, the Board of Education announced a joint project with the Ford Foundation to create three experimental school districts with elected school boards consisting of parents, teachers, and community leaders. The districts were located in East Harlem (including I.S. 201), the Two Bridges area of the Lower East Side, and Ocean Hill-Brownsville in Brooklyn.

In May of 1968, the elected school board of Ocean Hill-Brownsville school district dismissed nineteen teachers and administrators due to perceived lack of support for the decentralization effort. The New York United Federation of Teachers responded by calling a strike in September, claiming that the school board had violated the teachers' rights to due process. The resulting conflict, which at times turned violent, pitted the unionized teachers against community members and organizations supportive of decentralization. Allen worked constantly to act as a mediator between the two opposing groups, postponing his acceptance of the position of U.S. Commissioner of Education to work on the conflict. After another walkout by teachers, Allen's mediation led to a compromise position, which allowed the return of the dismissed teachers to the Ocean Hill-Brownsville school district, provided for a state-appointed trustee to oversee the school district, and retained the community school board and their selected district administrator. In April of 1969, the State Legislature passed a school decentralization law for New York City, which maintained and broadened the use of locally-controlled school districts, while preserving teachers' job security and the right of teachers to bargain collectively across city school districts.

The Center for Innovation in Education was founded in 1966 by the New York State Education Department and was funded in part by federal funds provided by Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. During the conflict over decentralization of New York City schools, the center was charged with reviewing the various decentralization plans leading up to the final plan submitted by the mayor of New York City. In addition, staff of the center kept Commissioner Allen informed on developments with the demonstration school districts, including the protests and negotiations surrounding the Ocean Hill-Brownsville district.