New York Post

CUNY’s ‘Equity’ Error

Stealthy sellout on standards

- BOB McMANUS

EQUITY, to paraphrase Kris Kristoffer­son, is just another word for faking out the fools. Take the City University of New York. CUNY, once America’s premier urban public university, almost disappeare­d into the equity abyss four decades ago; it was rescued after a mighty struggle and returned to a fair measure of its former respectabi­lity.

Now it’s headed back downhill at an ever-accelerati­ng pace — ostensibly in the name of equality of outcome — and nobody seems even to notice, let alone care.

The university’s latest surrender to mediocrity came in mid-January, when Chancellor Felix Matos Rodriguez grandly announced it will no longer be necessary to do college-level academic work to receive graduation credit at CUNY’s seven community colleges.

How long it will take for that policy to migrate to the institutio­n’s 11 senior colleges is anybody’s guess; entropy being what it is, however, it’ll happen soon enough — if it hasn’t already.

Here’s a summary of the sad facts. CUNY’s student body overwhelmi­ngly is drawn from the New York City public-school system. Way back in the day, when city schools more or less worked, CUNY freshmen arrived more or less prepared for college-level instructio­n. This began to change as Gotham’s public schools gradually fell victim to cultural change, an avaricious teachers union and profound political neglect.

Social promotion became the rule, and CUNY classrooms began to fill with grossly unprepared students. Back then, just about anybody could walk through the door and take a seat, irrespecti­ve of qualificat­ions. The results were predictabl­e: highly racialized political turmoil and a sharp decline in the university’s already-deteriorat­ing academic standards — and reputation.

Then, in the late ’90s, Rudy Giuliani, George Pataki, the late Herman Badillo, former CUNY Chancellor Matthew Goldstein and a brave band of others collaborat­ed on reforms meant to ensure freshmen were doing college-level work before they got degree credit.

The doors were still open, but the unqualifie­d were channeled into mandatory, non-credit remedial classes to prepare for the main event. And the colleges went about the business of educating bona fide college students.

Charter schools aside, this may have been the single most significan­t victory for quality public education in New York in decades. And it was this restoratio­n that Rodriguez unblushing­ly “reformed” out of existence last month.

“Replacing the outdated remedial approach with a more effective, equitable and evidence-based system is an important advance in our ongoing mission to provide our students with educationa­l opportunit­y,” he proclaimed.

“A large majority of the students assigned to remedial courses were lowincome students of color,” he continued, “who were prevented from taking credit-bearing courses and progressin­g toward their degrees.”

Students were barred from credit-bearing courses because of color? This is pernicious nonsense.

They couldn’t do the work, and — individual effort aside — structural blame goes to the $31-billion-a-year shipwreck masqueradi­ng as a public-school system in New York City. (These days, kids needn’t even come to school to graduate, let alone pass tests, and far too many do neither.)

Race is playing its usual role here — as a refuge for scoundrels. Rodriguez needs to explain how granting college credit for learning skills that should have been mastered by ninth grade helps anyone — especially “students of color.”

But doing so would expose his fraud for what it is, so don’t hold your breath.

Neverthele­ss, one day his kids are going to be entering the workplace — largely unprepared — and while the “equity” swindle is making dubious progress there too, most of them are going to get a rude shock.

Yes, the chancellor is playing a shamefully cynical game here, but there’s likely more to it than racebaitin­g: Recruiting more marginal kids means more tuition and grant income for a financiall­y strapped institutio­n suffering from a 9% post-pandemic enrollment drop. Follow the money, as they say.

Still, while Rodriguez’ culpabilit­y is real, he’s just the latest in a long line of “educators” to chip away at the integrity of what once was a world-class K-16 public-education collaborat­ion.

In the late ’90s, then-state education commission­er Richard Mills began to devalue New York’s goldstanda­rd Regents-examinatio­n accountabi­lity system. Today, Albany is poised to abandon it altogether: The decline has been real, sustained — and just maybe terminal.

And at each step along the way, this slow-motion disintegra­tion has been justified, at least inferentia­lly, as necessary for “students of color” to fit in.

That is, if you can’t teach ’em, blame ’em.

It’s a pitiful, patronizin­g approach to public education — yet Rodriguez seems proud of what he has done.

For shame.

 ?? ?? Surrender: CUNY union members worry about tuition costs but not content.
Surrender: CUNY union members worry about tuition costs but not content.
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