Plаintiff-appellant Tara Galabya appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Eugene H. Nickerson, Judge) entered December 17, 1998, granting the motion by defendant-appellee New York City Board of Education for summary judgment.
See Galabya v. New York City Bd. of Educ.,
After appellee transferred him from one New York City school to another, appellant, a teacher, sued under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621
et seq.
On appellee’s motion for summary judgmént, Judge Nickerson ruled that no genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether appellant’s transfer was an аdverse employment action, and thus that appellant had failed to establish a prima facie case of age discrimination under the
McDonnell Douglas
“pretext” rubric.
Galabya,
I. Background
Appellant was born on December 14, 1924, and was 68 years old when he was informed on Mаy 24, 1993, that he was being removed from his teaching position at Public School 4 in Queens, New York (“P.S.4”). P.S. 4 is a “cluster school” which includes a special education junior high school for “severely, - emotionally disturbed” students. Appellant taught at the junior high school.
The City School District of New York licensed аppellant to teach in New York City in 1973, granting him licenses in English and Pitman Stenography and Typewriting. Appellee began teaching at a special education school in 1974, and in 1977 he was awarded a “certificate of continuing eligibility” to teach “emotionally handicapped childrеn.”
Appellant’s license to teach stenography and typewriting was revoked in 1982 for reasons irrelevant to this appeal. Following the revocation, appellant did not teach for four and one-half years. In 1987, appellant resumed teaching under a per diem substitute teаcher license. It was this license that was in effect when he was hired to teach at P.S. 4’s junior high school in October of 1989. In 1991, appellant’s stenography and typewriting license was restored, and he resumed teaching under that license. The parties do not discuss, and the record does not show, what subject or subjects appellant taught at P.S.4, but he did not teach stenography or typewriting. According to Gene Nyitray, the principal of P.S. 4, it was not uncommon at that time to fill special education positions with teachers “who were, in fact, out of license.”
In 1993, P.S. 4 elected to сreate a computer lab for the 1993-94 school year to be staffed by one full-time teacher. Central to that job would be the teaching of keyboarding, a subject that falls within the purview of typewriting. Nyitray filled the *639 position by choosing a fifty-three year old teacher, who, like appеllant, was licensed to teach typewriting, but who had more seniority than appellant. With the computer lab assigned to another teacher, P.S. 4 had no open position for the 1993-94 school year that was within appellant’s license area. Critically, a recent system-wide poliсy now permitted placement of teachers only within their licensed areas. Accordingly, appellant was “excessed.” A teacher who is “excessed” is not fired, but rather is reassigned to another position in the school system.
Nyitray notified appellant that he had been exсessed in a letter dated May 24, 1993. In papers dated August 31, 1993, appellant filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleging that he had been excessed because of his age.
Appellant was not reassigned until September 20, 1993, eleven days into the 1993-94 school year. Thе Board of Education assigned appellant to Sarah Hale High School, but the assignment was rejected the next day by Sarah Hale’s principal because that school was seeking a teacher for Gregg' — rather than Pitman-stenography.
On September 27, 1993, appellant was reаssigned to teach keyboarding at Van Arsdale High School. Van Arsdale, like Sarah Hale, is a mainstream high school. Virtually all of appellant’s fourteen-year teaching career to that point had been spent in special education.
The transfer did not affect appеllant’s salary. There is no evidence in the record that the ultimate reassignment to Van Ars-dale resulted in a loss of benefits, prestige, or opportunities for advancement. It is evidently undisputed that the facilities at Van Arsdale are inferior to those at P.S. 4 to the extent that teachers аt Van Arsdale do not have their own classrooms, desks, or closets.
After a series of disputes at Van Ars-dale, appellant took a leave of absence. He was eventually terminated in March 1998.
II. DISCUSSION
“We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo,
taking all factual inferences in favor of the non-moving party. Summary judgment is apprоpriate where there are no genuine disputes concerning any material facts, and where the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Fagan v. New York State Elec. & Gas Corp.,
The ADEA bans discrimination against employees because of their age. To prevail on an ADEA claim under the
McDonnell Douglas
“pretext” rubric, “the plaintiff must first establish a
prima facie
case by showing membershiр in a protected class, qualification for the position, an adverse employment action, and circumstances that give at least minimal support to an inference of discrimination.”
Fagan,
Judge Nickerson granted summary judgment, in part, because he found as a matter of law that the transfer to Van Arsdale was not an adverse employment action within the meaning of the
McDonnell Douglas
analysis, but rather was a purely lateral transfer.
See Galabya,
Appellant, appearing pro se, does not identify with precision what he considers thе adverse employment action to have been, but his argument may reasonably be read as contending that he was denied assignment to the P.S. 4 computer lab, not assigned for the start of the 1993-94 school year, mis-assigned to Sarah Hale, and then ultimately assigned to Van Arsdale where he was fоrced to teach outside his area of expertise (special education) and at a school with inferior facilities to P.S. 4. We agree with Judge Nickerson *640 that this series of events does not constitute an adverse employment action. 1
A plaintiff sustains an adverse employmеnt action if he or she endures a “materially adverse change” in the terms and conditions of employment.
See Richardson v. New York State Dep’t of Correctional Serv.,
In this case, there is no evidence that shows that the delay in reassignment, followed by the mis-assignment to Sara Hale, was an adverse employment action. Appellant does not allege that appellee denied him an available transfer, that appellee failed to pay his salary during the interim period, or that the delay in any way harmed his career. The unspecified inconvenience that аppellant endured because of the relatively minor administrative miscues that occurred during the reassignment process is not cognizable as an adverse employment action. For similar reasons, the purportedly inferior facilities appellant faced at Van Arsdalе do not render the reassignment an adverse employment action. As a matter of law, the disparity in working conditions' — which reduces to the fact that teachers at Van Arsdale rotate through classrooms whereas teachers at P.S. 4 have their own classrooms — may be charaсterized as minor.
See Wanamaker,
The transfer of appellant out of special education classes presents a more difficult question, but we conclude that thе record is insufficient to permit the inference that this transfer constituted an adverse employment action. Appellant’s failure to create a genuine issue of material fact becomes clear when his case is compared to
Rodriguez v. Board of Educ.,
In
Rodriguez,
the plaintiff was a junior high school аrt teacher with twenty years of experience. In obtaining a master’s and doctoral degree in art and art education, she had focused her studies on art programs for junior high school students. Her doctoral dissertation was titled, “A Model Arts Program for the Middle School of Eastchester Sсhool District Number 1.”
Rodriguez,
Rodriguez
may be read for the proposition that a transfеr is an adverse employment action if it results in a change in responsibilities so significant as to constitute a setback to the plaintiffs career.
Accord Williams v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.,
In this context, аppellant’s argument rests on the premise that the special education, junior high school keyboarding class presented job responsibilities that were so different from the mainstream high school keyboarding class that the change in responsibilities was a setback to his career. We cannot adopt this conclusion as self-evident, and no evidence in the record supports it. There is no evidence detailing what responsibilities appellant performed during his years as a special education teacher. Similarly, appellant has not shown what particular expertise he developed during those years, nor how the transfer impacted on that expertise. 3 Indeed, appellant has not even proffered evidence to show what particular job responsibilities he would have had as the keyboarding instructor at P.S. 4, or how those responsibilities would have differed from those he had at Van Arsdale.
We are not suggesting that a plaintiff may prevail only if he or she produces as much evidence of adverse effect as the plaintiff did in
Rodriguez. Rodriguez
in no way establishes an evidentiary floor. The key, as stated in
Harlston,
is that the plaintiff must show that the transfer created a “materially significant disadvantage.”
Harlston,
III. Conclusion
We have reviewed the remaining arguments raised on appeal and find them to be without merit. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Appellant also argues that the classes were larger at Van Arsdale than at P.S. 4, and that the commute to Van Arsdale was substantially longer than the commute to P.S. 4. In support of these arguments, appellant includes in the appendix evidence that was not before the district court. As appellant's arguments are unpreserved and rely on evidence outside the record, we have not considered them.
See Anchor Fish Corp. v. Torry Harris, Inc.,
.
Richardson
is a Title VII case, but it is applicable here because both the ADEA and Title VII prohibit discrimination with respect to the "compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment....” 29 U.S.C. § 623(a)(1); 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l);
see also Austin v. Ford Models, Inc.,
. While not dispositive, it bears noting that unlike Rodriguez who had a master's degree and doctorate in the very subject from which she was transferred, appellant's graduate degree (a master’s) is not in special education, but English.
