The city investigator charged with rooting out corruption in public schęĻ¯ools fielded 880 allegations of academic fraud in thęĻ°e last three years, but probed less than a dozen, The Post has learned.
The Special Commissioner of Investigation for city schools tođŗld The Post the agency probed only 11 complaints such as test-tampering and grade-fixing between Dec. 6, 2016 and Nov. 21, 2019 â or 1 percent of the total.
SCI substantiated one of the 11 cases it looked into — a Bronx teacher giving Regents exam questions to a student who shared them on Facebook.
The SCI, which is independent of the DOE, referred the vast majorityđ§ of allegations â 823 â to the city Department of Education to investigate itself, an SCI spokeswoman told The Post.
“Itâs the fox guarding the henhouse,” said Councilman Robert Holden, who has called on the ęĻfeds to conduct a criminalđŗ probe of the DOE
What happened to those complaints is unknown. Commissioner Anastasia Colđ°eman would not say if she followed up on whether DOE investigated or substantiated the cases. The DOE refused to answer any qđuestions about them.
The lack of action and accountability alarms City Councilman Mark Treyger, chairman of the educađŦtion committđee.
đ He called on the SCI to do its job, or explain why notđ.
âIf SCI is in receipt of hundreds of complaints related to test integrity and grade fixing, that, to me, is crystal clear evidence that they must conductđ a systemic review of test integrity practices across the school syđstem,â Treyger told The Post.
âThis is the very reason why SCI was created. You do not punt that responsibility, you embrace that responsibility,” he said. The City Council can give funding for more staffing if needed, he added.
Theđļ late Edward Stancik, who led the SCI for 12 years after its founding in 1990, took an aggressive and systematic approach. His investigators looked for red flags, such as schools that shođŦwed unexplained hikes in performance, and detected dishonesty.
Stancik found âwidespreadđ ēâ test-tampering, and an education bureaucracy making little effort to fight it.
âNot only did the Boarđ°d of Education fail to vigorously pursue reported irregularities, it ignored information pointing to suspiciđous patterns which could have uncovered cheating,â Stancik wrote in his 1999 report,
After blowing the whistle, Stancik with more cases of test proctors giving students answers, encouraging kids to âcheckâ wrong answers, and châanging wrong respoāĩ˛nses after the tests were collected.
Last week, Stancđikâs then-deputy Robert Brenner, now chief opđˇerating and legal officer at K2 Intelligence, a corporate investigations firm, did not second-guess Coleman, but said a deeper look is critical.
âWhere there is evidence ođ f systemic misconduct and cheating, trained investigators really ought to get involved and consider where there should be referrals to law enforceđment,â Brenner said.
Test and grade fraud can pump up school performance data and graduation rates, giving DOE and city officials more to boast about. In a celebratory press conference last week, Mayor de Blasio and Chancellor Richard Carranza announced that 83 percent of grads had enrolledđ in college, a vocational course, the military or a “public service” program like AmeriCorps — up 3 percentage points from last year.
Last January, Carranza trumpeted a “record-high” graduation rate of nearly 76 percent.
Councilman Holden, a Queens Democrat, was contacted over the summer by teachers from Maspeth High School who say they quit after administrators strong-armed them to pass students even if the kids didnât show up or do the work, help them cheat on Regents exams, and change grades. The school boasts a near-perfect graduation rate.
Several Maspeth teachers told The Post they met with SCI investigators, who said the agency doesnât investigate academic misconduct. The teachers’ evidence was turned over to the DOEâs own Office of Special Investigations. The Queens DA is overseeing the case.
Coleman, who took became the Special Commissioner in February 2018, declined to comment on the cęĻases she dumped on the DOE.
SCI spokeswoman Regina Gluzmanova said allegations of academic misconduct maā˛ke up 3 percent of the complainđ ts the agency gets.
The DOE told The Post to file a Freedom of Information Law request for any investigatory findings. The last time The Post filed a FOIL request for such records, it took two years and a lawsuit against the DOE to pry them loose. Cases obtained last year, under a settlement, showed dozens of teachđers, principals and other staffę§ers engaged in cheating from 2013 to 2015.
David Bloomfield, a Brooklyn College and CUNY Graduate Center education professor, blasted the stođnewalling by both agencies.
âIf we are to believe DOE takes this seriously, they need to be transparent about the almost 1,000 misconduct allegations during the last three years,” Bloomfield said. “This game of investigatory hot potato instills little confidence in their commitment to academic integrity.”
âWe take any allegation of misconduct seriously, and when SCI refers an allegation to us, we investigate it in a thorough and timely manner,” DOE spokeswoman Danielle Filson said.