In Response to a Surge in Youth Activism, NYC Schools Hires Its First Student Voice Manager Who Says She鈥檒l Bring Kids Closer to the Decision Making
In early March, Dulce Marquez and a small group of New York City students found themselves in a unique position: Sitting in Tweed Courthouse, the Department of Education’s vast headquarters, conducting the final round of interviews for a new position tasked with elevating student voice.
One of the three finalists, Amallia Orman, immediately stood out, Marquez recalled.
鈥淲hen she walked in, she didn鈥檛 even acknowledge any of the adults in the room,鈥 said Marquez, a 2018 high school graduate and member of聽, a student activist group in the city. 鈥淗er attention [that day] was always with the students. The full attention.鈥
Orman is now the DOE鈥檚 first-ever “student voice manager” 鈥 a direct response to student activists鈥 in policy discussions and decisions on everything from integration to school discipline. A 38-year-old white woman, she is adamant that despite what her title may suggest, she is not the “voice” of the system’s predominantly black and Latino population. Rather, she says she considers herself a “facilitator” and “connector鈥 who “makes more opportunities for youth to be at the center of the decision-making that impacts their educational experience.”
“I鈥檓 the person who鈥檚 [thinking about], ‘How can we get students to this table, or how can we get the people at this table to students?鈥” Orman said. “Youth are the most valuable and transformative stakeholders in education, and our most abundant resource.”
A Minneapolis native, Orman has lived in New York City for more than 20 years. She’s worked with students extensively, most recently as a student success advocate and instructor at CUNY’s Guttman Community College. She beat out about 350 applicants for the job, which formally started in April and comes with a $77,000-a-year base salary.
Orman鈥檚 day-to-day agenda in the country鈥檚 largest school district isn鈥檛 prescriptive 鈥 more “grassroots,” as she likes to say. She’s in schools regularly; last week, she visited a school that wants to start a student council. She’s sitting in on meetings with student groups and district officials, “taking notes … following up on the next steps, making sure youth are kept in the loop.鈥 She鈥檚 getting youth feedback on a . She also intends to help plan a few forum-like events for students this year who want to craft “a youth agenda for the city.”
鈥淲hen students see their voices reflected in the policies that we put forward, it gives you not only the proof, but it gives you what we call agency 鈥 the presence to know that what you say is being listened to. And that鈥檚 incredibly powerful,鈥 Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza said earlier this month about the position during a first-day-of-school visit to Newcomers High School in Queens.
Considering there are about 1.1 million district students, the position’s focus has mainly been on high schoolers so far, Orman said. There aren’t plans at this time to hire another student voice manager, a DOE spokesperson wrote in a Sept. 23 email.
Marquez and senior Tiffani Torres, also with Teens Take Charge, stressed that they want Orman to invest time connecting with underserved students who aren’t already activists 鈥 something Orman told 蜜桃影视 she is prioritizing.
“There are so many students and families who don鈥檛 have the time to [get involved] and whose voices aren鈥檛 being represented,” Torres said. “Our hope is that Amallia takes her time, especially within these communities. ….We need her to be able to facilitate the conversations and the interactions that need to happen with these students.”

While Torres said she thinks Orman will “do an amazing job,” she wishes the student voice manager were a person of color. The聽 is about 40 percent Hispanic, 26 percent black, 16 percent Asian and 15 percent white.
“It does matter,” said Torres, 16. “We talk a lot about representation and how we need integration, not only on the student level but on the level of the administration.”
Marquez, now an incoming New York University student, agreed that it鈥檚 鈥渁n issue.鈥 But the eight to 10 students who attended that final round of interviews 鈥渨ere able to connect more with Amallia鈥 than the other two candidates, she said 鈥 even with one who was a person of color.
鈥淲hat makes her capable is the fact that she doesn鈥檛 disengage with the fact that she鈥檚 white. She鈥檚 aware of it,鈥 the 18-year-old said. 鈥淎nd more than that, you can call her out on it. You can still share your personal experiences. And she鈥檚 more than open to talking about it.鈥
Orman was quick to acknowledge her 鈥渨hiteness鈥 when asked about whether she felt capable of understanding minority students’ life experiences and their needs.聽“I鈥檓 comfortable helping facilitate and listening to critical conversations about race, class [and] gender,” she said, emphasizing that “listening is the most radical practice that I鈥檝e done, not just as an educator but as a white educator.”
“This is something that I thought about a lot in the hiring process,” she added. “But I left it up to young people, and that鈥檚 it.鈥
Orman has connected with numerous students, student groups and organizations with youth programs, such as , , , and Chancellor Carranza鈥檚 , a department spokesperson said. But her appointment wasn’t publicly announced 鈥 DOE hires typically are not 鈥 and many other students appear unaware that the position exists.
鈥淲e should have heard more about it,” said Sarah Kogan, a 16-year-old from Staten Island who 鈥 when asked at the Sept. 20 Climate March 鈥 didn鈥檛 know that the DOE had brought on a student voice manager. “That should鈥檝e been made more clear to us because that鈥檚 directly affecting us.鈥
Another Climate March attendee, Zakariah Massoud, 14, also had no idea about the new role. But he liked the concept. “Yes [it鈥檚 important]. We are the people who need to decide the future, because we鈥檙e the ones having that future,鈥 said Massoud, who鈥檚 from the South Bronx.
Right now, it’s hard to find Orman personally or through accounts dedicated to her new role on the platforms teenagers use most 鈥 Snapchat and Instagram 鈥 or on Twitter. Orman noted that “part of the work of this job is creating more student-facing communication.鈥 Launching social media platforms and content 鈥渁re priorities for this school year,” a department spokesperson said.
The best way for students to reach her currently is by emailing [email protected].
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have to come through direct channels,鈥 Orman added as she passed along her email. 鈥淚鈥檓 happy to meet with students and go to them.鈥
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