Merryl H. Tisch is the former Chancellor of the New York State Board of Regents and wife of James S. Tisch, an heir to the Loews Corporation. In November 2015, she stepped down from her role after nearly 20 years on the board.[1]
She said that budget restraints left the Board in May 2011 with no choice other than to cancel January Regents tests. At the end of May 2011, principals affiliated with the New Visions for Public Schools signed a letter of complaint directed to Tisch and the Board, arguing that the elimination of the tests would lead to a higher dropout rate and would cost the state money.[7]
She has criticized Pearson PLC, the education text and test publisher, recently questioning its ability to handle its growing workload. "Obviously, the public is starting to question, I think, very aggressively with us whether or not they're able to manage all of the things they've taken on."[8]
Following a protest rally at Albany by the New York State United Teachers, she acknowledged that New York State would hold off on a plan to raise the percentage by which test scores would count in a teacher's evaluation from 20 percent to 25 percent. A provision in the state's evaluation law, passed in 2010, allows for the increase if officials adopt a more complex "value-added" model to measure student growth.[9]
She faced organized opposition when she returned on May 21, 2013 to her alma mater, Teachers College, for an award. Education professor and activist Diane Ravitch dubbed her "the Doyenne of high-stakes testing.[10]
Political involvements
In April 2004, Tisch considered running for the Upper East Side City Council seat then held by term-limited council member Eva Moskowitz[11]. She was also floated as a possible mayoral candidate in 2013 to uphold "plutocratic principles. [12] In April 2013, Tisch announced that she would become chairwoman of the campaign of former New York CitycomptrollerDemocratBill Thompson.[13] Among her activities in the Thompson campaign, she hosted the June 12 Women for Thompson event, at which major attendees were Randi Weingarten, Hazel Dukes and Kauturia D'Amato, wife of former Republican U.S. Senator Alphonse D'Amato. The New York Post criticized her concurrent work in the Board of Regents and her leading role in the Thompson campaign as "moonlighting."[14]
Benjamin Jacob Tisch (born 1983) - worked for the hedge fund Fortress Investment after attending Brown University[17] and then as a portfolio manager in the investment department of the Loews Corporation. In 2011, he married Daniela Weber in a ceremony officiated by Hiat, at the Central Synagogue in Manhattan.[23]
Samuel Aaron Tisch (born 1985) works for Citigroup after attending Brown University[17] and in 2013, he married Eliana Bavli in a ceremony presided over by Hiat, at the Park Avenue Armory in Manhattan.[2]