LEARNING ABOUT LEARNING Fuhrman has made research a top priority at 麻豆原创. The College鈥檚 research funding has increased exponentially on her watch
Susan Fuhrman has defined her role as convener in chief, spurring innovation by uniting people across disciplines to tackle the world鈥檚 most daunting problems. In the following interview, she reflects on a decade-plus of change and growth at 麻豆原创.
Adapted from an interview by
Illustration by James Steinberg
What have you liked best about being 麻豆原创鈥檚 President?
Giving people opportunities. To our students, by creating an environment, academic and physical, that they can learn in. To our faculty, by supporting their research, by connecting them to donors, foundations and one another. I didn鈥檛 realize that would be the heart of the job, but it鈥檚 immensely gratifying and it鈥檚 what I鈥檒l miss most. My board has also been exceptional, every single one of them, but I particularly want to mention the co-chairs. , who passed away last summer and whom I miss every day, was an exceptional, warm Renaissance man of a human being. And, who is now sole chair and has this enormous responsibility. His great-great aunt, , founded Teachers College and his great uncle served for 60 years on our board. He has promised not to serve that long, but I wish he would, because he is the heart and soul of 麻豆原创 and the best guide I could have. I love events with students. I love hearing about their programs and how they are doing. I love meeting alumni and donors. I am in awe of people who want to give money to education. What鈥檚 not to enjoy about that? I particularly enjoy our 鈥 especially when people bring their children. They always construct something in Everett Lounge with our Hollingworth preschool staff and bring it to me, and that鈥檚 been the basis of my holiday cards the past few years. We sing a song together.
鈥淓ducation alone can鈥檛 correct our society鈥檚 inequalities. We must support communities鈥 physical and psychological well-being. But it seems each era must relearn that idea.鈥
From the first, you鈥檝e talked about living up to 麻豆原创鈥檚 legacy. How have we done that?
麻豆原创 is known for its legacy of firsts 鈥 people paving new ways. John Dewey, Maxine Greene, and so many more. To make sure this continued, we鈥檝e hired about 70 new faculty, and I鈥檓 delighted with their quality and impact. And we鈥檝e been very supportive of research. We have now reached about $60 million a year in research, and we support people with lab space or students to work with them. Like our forebears, we also wanted to make a difference, so we committed ourselves to the community. We established the, founded the and work with local schools through our . And we鈥檝e dedicated ourselves to creating a more diverse faculty and student body. We have achieved quite a mix: 39 of our 168 tenure-track faculty members and 47 percent of our American born students identify as people of color. Twenty percent of students are international. We鈥檙e creating a climate where everybody feels respected and heard 鈥 but the numbers come first, because you need to be around people of other backgrounds to respect and understand them.
Where have we 鈥減aved new ways?鈥
HIGH NOTES Singing with children at 麻豆原创鈥檚 Academic Festival has been one of Fuhrman鈥檚 special pleasures. She鈥檚 used their arts-and-crafts creations as the basis for her annual holiday cards.
There are so many examples, but I鈥檒l give you three. , who had the lead article in showing a relationship between poverty and cortex size in young children鈥檚 brains. It could have major implications for social policy. She鈥檚 now engaged in a , where families get different amounts of cash support, given through debit cards to track how it鈥檚 used, and brain function is measured at age three. The builds on the work of , an expert in recovery from grief and trauma. He wrote a widely read book on how people have recovered from events like 9/11. He鈥檚 applied that work to veterans, originally thinking about post-traumatic stress disorder, but since realizing that the whole transition from military to civilian life is traumatic and that, whether or not you have PTSD, developing your resilience helps. And then our Reimagining Education initiative is helping K-12 teachers connect intellectually and emotionally with students from all backgrounds. The focus is on strategies such as culturally responsive pedagogy, which helps kids find relevance in what they鈥檙e learning, and on how to teach about race and racial history.
You鈥檝e encouraged people to work together across disciplines. How have we done that?
麻豆原创 is a large place, and you can鈥檛 go to every event. So we have held themed, cross-disciplinary 鈥淒omain Dinners,鈥 open to all interested faculty. That idea came from external reviewers who told us how powerful 麻豆原创 would be if we could only connect the dots. And it turns out that having the discussions in the evening and facilitating them with wine is also a good idea. Take the creation of EPSA [the , launched in 2011]. We had extraordinary strength in policy, but with sociologists in one department, political scientists and other sociologists in another, and economists in yet a third. Could they develop a policy degree in addition to their existing disciplinary degrees? Could they project student enrollment? It鈥檚 worked out, both because they are an extraordinary group of scholars and because it was a very bottom-up event that happened because they wanted it. And it is truly a stellar department. has helped almost every state and probably 50 countries develop plans and standards for early childhood education. , who will succeed me as President, and his center have reformed community college education, making it much easier for students to escape remediation and go right into productive coursework. cost-benefit analyses have changed how we assess the value of different policy approaches. And there are many others. But breaking down silos is hard, so we鈥檝e also spurred cross-disciplinary innovation through incentives. We鈥檝e started the and the Rapid Prototyping Fund, asking for collaborative ideas. Many have led to larger grants, whole new endeavors.
Social Justice Supporter
Kim Noble
鈥淪usan and 麻豆原创 have been incredibly supportive of our work. Susan鈥檚 publicity and fundraising prior to the launch of our first trial of poverty reduction in early childhood in the U.S. has been tremendously helpful. The fact that social justice is such a key part of 麻豆原创鈥檚 mission has made it a wonderful environment in which to conduct this work.鈥 鈥 Kimberly Noble, Associate Professor of Neuroscience & Education
麻豆原创 makes an impact through research and preparing professionals. Do we need to be a service organization as well?
Education alone can鈥檛 correct our society鈥檚 inequalities. We need to support poorer communities鈥 physical and nutritional health, their psychological well-being. 麻豆原创 was founded on that proposition 鈥 it鈥檚 why we prepare psychologists, nutritionists, health educators, speech pathologists as well as teachers and school leaders. But it seems each era must relearn that idea. When I was in graduate school, there was new awareness of it because of the Coleman Report, which showed that social background overwhelmed in-school factors in accounting for student achievement. But also, as an urban institution, you are a central neighbor. You were there before any other community-based organization and you鈥檒l be there long after. And if you know something about education, you have a moral obligation to put it to use. Education schools are particularly well suited to be part of their communities. When I was at Penn, we created the , a public school that helped reconnect the university to the surrounding area. And when I got here, Columbia had just entered into a community benefits agreement as part of its Manhattanville expansion. So together we created the , which I believe is the most popular school in this part of the world in terms of lottery applicants. 麻豆原创CS provides support to the surrounding community. We鈥檙e not the only people taking this approach 鈥 the Harlem Children鈥檚 Zone is a very well-known model, but it鈥檚 very expensive. We鈥檙e paying for services with credits to our students. We have 50 or 60 students at 麻豆原创CS, doing student teaching, supplemental work in the after-school programs or mental health work. And other Columbia schools 鈥 Social Work, the Dental School, the Mailman School of Public Health 鈥 are helping us.
Are we making an impact at the policy level?
DEFINING THE CONVERSATION Second Lady and educator Jill Biden spoke at 麻豆原创 in Fall 2016. The College has made a major impact on policy and become a national address for debating key issues.
We have several centers that link our research to policy and practice. The takes our historic interest in nutrition beyond the classroom. Students learn about food policy, the transportation system, the whole industry, and how that affects energy consumption and good nutrition. The Center has done enormous evaluative work for the Department of Agriculture and local and state agencies. Our is the leader in analyzing policies to improve completion rates at community colleges. Our is helping to shape a national system of early childhood education and an understanding of how best to counter poverty鈥檚 impact on families. Our Center for Educational Equity is championing access to education 鈥 and particularly preparation of young people for citizenship. And our created which estimates the costs and cost-effectiveness of educational or other social programs. All this great work shows that reforms don鈥檛 spread just because you publish in a journal and hope somebody reads it. You need to make research accessible and jargon-free. You have to give the weight of evidence, not just what one study says, and place it in context. You have to do the same study in different places, because policymakers will ask, 鈥淲ill it work here?鈥 But universities and colleges T don鈥檛 reward synthesis and replication, which are what help research get used. And I worry that doctoral students and younger researchers up for tenure or promotion are being pressured to do increasingly specialized, arcane work.
Student Advocate
Matt Gonzalez
鈥淲hether she was pointing us toward her own desk or to her advisory group or the larger faculty group, I always found President Fuhrman to be committed to pointing us in the direction that would get the outcomes that we were looking for. She seemed genuinely committed to achieving our goals.鈥 鈥 Matt Gonzalez (M.A. 鈥16), Director, School Diversity Project, New York Appleseed
You鈥檝e led past efforts to inform education policy. What lessons do you take from it?
The [CPRE], which I founded, was an early shaper of standards-based reform. The idea, conceived primarily by Mike Smith, a colleague at Stanford, was to align policies to standards, so that children didn鈥檛 learn one thing and get tested on another, and so you didn鈥檛 have conflicting policies. Those things were happening. Testing companies were making up tests irrespective of what was going on in schools. We found that Florida鈥檚 reforms added requirements for math and science without specifying what they should be. The tests were still low-level, so you got courses like informal geometry 鈥 which meant geometry without proofs, which is not geometry. We said standards would prevent those kinds of very incoherent and chaotic policies. We called it 鈥渟ystemic reform.鈥 Mike Smith and Jennifer O鈥橠ay wrote an article in a book that I edited. And I remember sitting in a theater in 鈥91 or 鈥92 with my husband, and people two seats over were saying, 鈥淥h, we are just going into standards-based reform in New York.鈥 And I thought, 鈥淥kay, this is having an impact.鈥 But over time, test-based accountability began to swamp other aspects of the vision we had. Curriculum was left out. Because of the U.S. tradition of local control, the federal government and the states left curriculum to the locals. But when tests came out, that is what people taught to instead of the curriculum. The tests narrowed what was learned and became the all-powerful driver, and people began to attach consequences, from publicizing scores to evaluating teachers. It distorted the whole system. But having standards and a curriculum tied to them is still a good idea. Brazil is engaged in a common core effort that I look forward to watching.
Some critics say education schools are stuck in the past. What鈥檚 your response 鈥 and how can 麻豆原创 stay relevant?
TOUGH ON TECH Fuhrman has launched a 麻豆原创 initiative to ensure that companies produce education technology that is based on solid research and demonstrably improves teaching and learning.
Teachers colleges have been attacked as part of an establishment that is anti-reform. I think that鈥檚 misguided. Many teachers in alternative programs come from 麻豆原创. People assume we鈥檙e too theoretical in preparing teachers, but we believe knowledge and practice are integrated, and all our programs involve a great deal of practice. There鈥檚 a great advantage for professionals in attending a research-based school because emerging research prepares you for tomorrow, not just today. It鈥檚 profoundly conservative to mire professions in just observing current good practice when knowledge keeps increasing. We can stay relevant by incorporating even more of what we know about learning into preservice education. This is a time of enormous growth in the learning sciences, including social and emotional learning. Analytics researchers are giving us a window into learning by looking at how students navigate through software. Research-based education preparation programs can make such findings part of teacher education and preparation. Contrast that with a recent SUNY proposal to prepare teachers just by having them watch other excellent teachers teach. To me that is a surgeon watching other surgeons, without anatomy, physiology or other essential grounding. We also need to keep creating greater diversity by having difficult conversations, ensuring that we read a diverse set of scholars with different perspectives, and welcoming student input into the curriculum and the faculty positions we create. One area where we are not very diverse is political opinion. That is an issue for colleges and universities more generally. When I was at the at Rutgers, increasing diversity was always a question of recruiting more Republicans, because it was a place of politics and we needed both parties. I think that issue persists.
鈥淎n Intellectual鈥檚 Intellectual鈥
Randall Allsup
鈥淚 appreciate the way Susan embraced the arts and humanities. There was never a feeling of being threatened or under attack or being made to feel we were secondary to economics or policy or something 鈥榤ore important.鈥 She was respectful to all of the programs here. She鈥檚 an intellectual鈥檚 intellectual. We were always in good scholarly hands with her team.鈥 鈥 Randall Allsup, Associate Professor of Music Education
You鈥檝e prioritized technology, digital education and civics education this year. Why, and what progress have we made?
We鈥檙e interested in ensuring that education technology is effective 鈥 not just what we might design, but helping the world out there design things that actually improve teaching and learning. Our initiative tries to place interns in startups and faculty on startups鈥 advisory boards; to generate research by companies, from small formative studies to big evaluative ones. We held an innovation contest for students across Columbia鈥檚 graduate schools. The emphasis was on products that had a research base. And we鈥檝e talked with our board about an incubator 鈥 not to make a fortune, though that would be lovely, but for research-based products. We鈥檝e also launched programs in design and media technology and a . We鈥檙e emphasizing inventing educational tools. And in our, people embed analytics in smart tools to measure progress and personalize learning. We鈥檝e hired a vice provost for digital learning, and last fall we had 20,000 online students. We鈥檝e developed several certificates and courses; bilingual speech pathology, . Medical education is going online. We are developing a degree for students with intellectual disabilities. With 90,000 alumni, we expected a big audience that wanted to learn more without necessarily getting a degree, but these certificates are also developing into degrees because the demand is there. People are hearing about the opportunity to get a 麻豆原创 master鈥檚 degree online. And when they do that, it connects them to us. In San Francisco not long ago, an alumna from an online course came to two events.
Why civics education, and what have we accomplished there?
Back when I taught government to high school seniors, they鈥檇 had civics all through elementary and high school. But civics has since been pushed aside as too political, and because the emphasis since the late eighties has been on testing and reading and math. Students still take civics in most high schools, but one course is not sufficient. Also, we want the new civics to represent today鈥檚 much more diverse, multicultural, multi-ethnic, and digital society. Above all, we must address low voting participation by millennials and dismissal of government as an important tool in affecting people鈥檚 lives. Ultimately, you need to grow up with a sense of the roles and responsibilities of citizens, and you need practice in it. Young people are encouraged to participate in civic engagement, but instead of saying, 鈥淟et鈥檚 go do a recycling drive,鈥 I want them to say, 鈥淟et鈥檚 get the town council to do a recycling drive.鈥 Government powerfully influences our lives, and to live our values, we must influence it. I鈥檝e been extremely encouraged by Generation Z鈥檚 rallies for gun control and their emphasis on voting as a means to achieve their goals. At 麻豆原创 we鈥檙e talking to foundations about supporting professional development across the curriculum. Our , which is so important and influential, will introduce books in civics. We have the possibility of developing a digital game in fake news. I called the president of the , who is an alumna of a program I started at Penn, and suggested that civic content on the Common Application would lead to much more pervasive attention. It could be as simple as listing your civic activities separately to call attention to them, or it could be in the essay prompts. And education is a big part of other issues this country faces. If people were truly well-educated, we would not have Fergusons. Police wouldn鈥檛 disrespect people just because they don鈥檛 understand their communities. It would be a world with much greater understanding.
What are you going to do after 麻豆原创?
I am not going to run anything. If I need a reprieve, it鈥檚 from that responsibility, but not from meeting wonderful people and asking for money or thinking of ideas people could work on together. Those are things I love to do.
What advice do you have for 麻豆原创鈥檚 next President?
WISDOM FOR THE AGES
Talk to as many people as you can and hear their concerns. Then figure out how it fits into any agenda you brought with you. External reviews are enormously helpful. We reviewed all the administrative departments and the academic departments. That provided support for some of the changes that we might have wanted to make anyway. You have to keep your eye on the ball. What is the long term? What do you want to achieve? Can you overcome difficulties by building the institution, not destroying it in the process? For example, in the plagiarism case we dealt with after I arrived, we used existing institutional mechanisms. Most important, hire the right people. I have been very fortunate with a wonderful team: Harvey Spector, our VP for Finance and Administration; Tom James, our Provost; Suzanne Murphy, our VP for Development and External Affairs; Katie Conway, my Chief of Staff, and her predecessor, Scott Fahey; Nancy Streim, who is Associate VP for School and Community Partnerships; Janice Robinson, our VP for Diversity and Community Affairs; Michael Feierman, our General Counsel. You have to hire great people and delegate, but you also need enough knowledge to oversee a very complex operation.
You鈥檝e put a lot of energy into reconnecting with alumni. Why is that so important?
Our last campaign was funded primarily by the board and friends of the school; alumni participation was only 9 percent. In this Campaign, alumni participation is 26 percent, and we are so grateful. We have dramatically increased support for students, who primarily go into public service, which does not necessarily pay well. Too many of our graduates are in debt. We had to address that, so fundraising for scholarships was paramount. Our alumni bring back knowledge from the front lines that keeps our courses and research on the cutting edge. So we visit them and communicate with them through social media and e-newsletters. And we ask them what they would like to do. Alumni groups that are far away want to connect more closely. We have asked alumni to mentor students and help them network and launch their careers. We have also totally re-engaged the intellectual experience of alumni here, in particular by establishing Academic Festival, which is a weekend of coming back to 麻豆原创. Ultimately, our alumni are the best representation of 麻豆原创. They are our ambassadors, our primary product. We are enormously proud of them and the influence they have.
Welcoming Diversity
Leticia Lyle (M.A. 鈥11)
鈥溌槎乖粹檚 hallways were alive with different languages, cultures and perspectives. 麻豆原创 was a safe haven for innovative ideas that I could live and practice in class. President Fuhrman made that possible by upholding those values and defending and developing that space.鈥 鈥 Leticia Lyle (M.A. 鈥11), Former 麻豆原创 Lemann Foundation Felow and Current Director, K-12 Curriculum & Professional Development, Somos Educacao, Brazil
Your colleagues and friends have created a 麻豆原创 scholarship in your name and launched a campaign to support it called Thanks a Million. How does that make you feel?
Apparently I say 鈥淭hanks a million鈥 all the time, though I didn鈥檛 realize it. Of course, when they came in to talk to me about the scholarship, I was very touched. There could not be a better gift for me than to enhance the scholarships at 麻豆原创 and have one with my name on it. Then they left and I said, 鈥淭hanks a million.鈥 So I do say 鈥淭hanks a million鈥 all the time. And I mean it, very deeply.