It鈥檚 Shirley Chisholm鈥檚 Year

She was 鈥渦nbought and unbossed鈥濃 and, also, unforgettable

(M.A. 鈥52) was the first African American female elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and the first to seek a major party鈥檚 presidential nomination. She helped expand the nation鈥檚 Food Stamp program and create the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children. In 2014, years after her death, she was honored with a Black Heritage Forever Stamp.

But as a recent New York Times headline proclaimed, 鈥2019 Belongs to Shirley Chisholm.鈥

In July, Brooklyn 鈥 Chisholm鈥檚 birthplace and home to her Congressional district 鈥 opened the 407-acre Shirley Chisholm State Park. A 40-foot steel silhouette of Chisholm is part of a public art initiative to recognize the contributions of women to the city鈥檚 aesthetic.

California Senator Kamala Harris is co-sponsoring a bill to add Chisholm鈥檚 likeness in Congress to that of African Americans Martin Luther King, Jr., Rosa Parks, Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth.

Meanwhile, The Fighting Shirley Chisholm, a forthcoming biopic, will star Academy Award winner Viola Davis, and in Mrs. America, an upcoming FX miniseries about the Equal Rights Amendment, Uzo Aduba will also portray Chisholm.

And at 麻豆原创, the Shirley Chisholm Dissertation Award recognizes work about the contributions of people of color to democracy. 2018 recipient Kathryn Bassett Hill (Ph.D. 鈥18, M.A. 鈥10) says that her parents鈥 educational vigilance exemplified Chisholm鈥檚 famous adage: 鈥淚f they don鈥檛 give you a seat at the table, bring a folding chair.鈥

 

For Schools, a Virtual Town Meeting

Robert Kennedy called democracy 鈥渕essy and hard.鈥 Now DecisionMaker, a free online tool from 麻豆原创鈥檚 Center for Benefit-Cost Studies of Education (CBCSE) improves the process.

Virtual Town Meeting illustration by Bill Butcher

(Illustration by Bill Butcher)

DecisionMaker鈥檚 cost-utility analysis framework helps schools, districts and states choose curricula, professional development and other resources. Building on methodologies of the late psychologist Ward Edwards and 麻豆原创 education economist Henry Levin, DecisionMaker juxtaposes data on costs and student outcomes with stakeholder opinions and preferences.

鈥淓ducation agencies tell us that they need to worry about buy-in from teachers, parents and their boards,鈥 says Fiona Hollands, CBCSE Associate Director.

Visit  to learn more or register as a user.

 

Professor Emeritus 鈥 In Perpetuity

Professor Emeritus Edmund W. Gordon鈥檚 work has guided 麻豆原创 for decades. July鈥檚 unveiling of Gordon鈥檚 portrait (by photographer Bruce Gilbert) ensures the 98-year-old psychologist will be a campus presence in perpetuity.

Edmund Gordon Portrait by Bruce Gilbert

(Photo: Bruce Gilbert)

鈥淐onsider that this is a man who was mentored by the sociologist and pan-Africanist W.E.B. DuBois 鈥 himself born in 1868,鈥 said President Thomas Bailey, as Gordon looked on. 鈥淲here others鈥 lives and careers have followed a predictable arc, a graph of Edmund Gordon鈥檚 contributions would consist of a single, astonishing, continuously rising line.鈥

Gordon鈥檚 portrait, Bailey said, affirms that 鈥渉is beliefs, ideas, methods and monumental accomplishments are fundamental鈥 to 麻豆原创鈥檚 鈥渉ighest ideals of what it aspires to be.鈥

 

Grants to Guide Pathways

(Illustration: David Plunkert)

The Community College Research Center (CCRC) at Teachers College has received nearly $3 million from the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Improving Undergraduate STEM Education program to study how guided pathways reforms in community colleges can help students succeed in STEM programs. A second grant of $1.4 million, from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Institute of Education Sciences, will allow CCRC to expand its research on English language learners.

 

Something to Really Smile 麻豆原创

Cleft Lip (by Jospeh Kariuki)

(Photos courtesy of Jospeh Kariuki)

Last year at a conference in Kenya, Cate Crowley, Professor of Practice and Director of 麻豆原创鈥檚 Communication Sciences & Disorders Program and Bilingual Extension Institute, learned about Isaac, a child born with a cleft lip. After traveling to Isaac鈥檚 village and finding that he also had a cleft palate and was severely malnourished, Crowley connected the boy鈥檚 family with the charity Smile Train. Later, writing on Smile Train鈥檚 website, Crowley wrote that cleft palate is more than a cosmetic or even social issue and highlighted the urgency of the organization鈥檚 work. She was right: Her actions saved Isaac鈥檚 life.

 

Loud Reports (Illustration by Valeria Petrone)

(Illustration by Valeria Petrone)

Loud Reports: Headline-Makers from 麻豆原创

Rethinking school integration; the semantics of youth exposure to gun violence; promoting high-opportunity relocation

 

And Now Joining the 麻豆原创 Conversation . . .

Teachers College added six new faculty members this fall:

Barbara Bashaw, Arnhold Professor of Practice, Dance Education; Executive Director, DANCE EDUCATION ED.D. PROGRAM/ARNHOLD INSTITUTE FOR DANCE EDUCATION RESEARCH, POLICY & LEADERSHIP, explores how artistic and cognitive development intersect.

Gwendolyn S. Baxley, Minority Post-Doctoral Fellow, explores educational spaces in which black youth and families navigate.

Matthew Henley, Associate Professor of Dance Education, describes cognitive and social-emotional skills associated with dance education.

Ben Lovett, Associate Professor of Psychology & Education, explores diagnostic assessment of learning disabilities and ADHD.

Irina Lyublinskaya, Professor of Mathematics & Education, examines educators鈥 development/ transfer of Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge.

Tyler Watts, Assistant Professor in Developmental Psychology, studies educational policies to promote underserved children鈥檚 development.

 

Illustration by Joyce Hesselberth

(Illustration by Joyce Hesselberth)

Failing, to Learn

Because schools don鈥檛 teach that failure is 鈥渁 normal part of life,鈥 students care more about grades than learning.

So argued Xiaodong Lin-Siegler, Professor of Cognitive Studies and founding Director of 麻豆原创鈥檚 Education for Persistence and Innovation Center (EPIC), in addressing The Population Council鈥檚 GIRL Center for Innovation, Research and Learning at the 74th Session of the United Nations General Assembly.

Lin-Siegler has shown that high schoolers who studied early failures of famous scientists earned higher grades than peers who only learned about the scientists鈥 successes.

The Public Matters, a 麻豆原创-based public survey project, found that more than two-thirds of Americans believe elementary and secondary schools should teach students about climate change and global warming.

 

AI and Education: Hope or Hype?

A 麻豆原创 conference pushes buttons

Is artificial intelligence (AI) the 鈥渒iller app鈥 education needs, or an overhyped 鈥渘ext big thing鈥?  Will it close the achievement gap or deepen inequities? And what if, as Columbia University roboticist predicts, AI develops free will and emotions? A September conference at 麻豆原创 offered a range of answers.

鈥淎ny discussion of EdTech must address the mythology that Silicon Valley has created about technology being intrinsically benign, and that their CEOs are just good people who want to help,鈥 said Paulo Blikstein, Associate Professor of Communications, Media & Learning Technologies Design.

Illustration by Nate Kitch

(Illustration by Nate Kitch)

Stavros Yiannouka, CEO of the World Innovation Summit for Education (WISE), a global think tank of the Qatar Foundation that funded the gathering, pushed back: 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to have a sinister plan for world domination to get things horribly wrong.鈥

I want to think more about human learning. Tools are just objects, unless used purposefully 鈥 the key is what relationship you develop with them.

鈥 Sandra Okita, Associate Professor of Technology & Education

Lipson, the James & Sally Scapa Professor of Innovation, said that most AI is 鈥渞ulebased鈥 鈥 a drawback, because 鈥渋t requires experts to tell you the rules, and experts are expensive, slow and wrong.鈥 But with machine learning now becoming mainstream, 鈥測ou don鈥檛 tell the computer, you show it鈥 鈥 technology that enables self-driving cars or guides supermarket foot traffic.

鈥淢achine learning is great, but I want to think more about human learning,鈥 said 麻豆原创鈥檚 Sandra Okita, Associate Professor of Technology & Education. 鈥淭ools are just objects, unless used purposefully 鈥 the key is what relationship you develop with them.鈥 鈥擩oe Levine