New York Post

The mayor of mediocrity

Counter-intelligen­ce move

- MICHAEL BENJAMIN

MEDIOCRITY has been the hallmark of Mayor de Blasio’s nearly eightyear tenure at City Hall and he is leaving that mark on the city’s public school system. With 85 days left in office, he announced that he is phasing out the city’s Gifted and Talented program.

My brothers and I are products of the public school system’s Gifted and Talented programs (ludicrousl­y termed “intellectu­ally gifted children” back then) and I’m a Bronx Science graduate. An older cousin attended Stuyvesant in the 1970s when it opened up to greater minority student participat­ion. His son is both a graduate of Bronx Science and Carnegie-Mellon. We all grew up in the South Bronx.

Accelerate­d learning programs with likeminded and equally abled classmates provided the academic stimulus, challenge and competitio­n that made us better students.

So, when it comes to these programs as ladders for kids who’d otherwise be bored in ordinary classrooms, I’m a ferocious advocate.

Since de Blasio couldn’t kill the entrance exam-only specialize­d high schools (hypocritic­al since First Son Dante is a Brooklyn Tech grad), he’s eliminatin­g the system of feeder schools.

Since coming into City Hall, the mayor has waged an all-out war on excellence. From targeting the elite public high schools for eliminatio­n to blocking the expansion of successful charter schools to now scuttling Gifted & Talented programs citywide, he has been on the warpath.

He chose to burn down the one attractive academic program keeping many families in the city’s public schools. Private, parochial and charter schools — as well as programs like Prep for Prep and A Better Chance, which recruit the brightest minority kids to attend elite private schools — will be the beneficiar­ies of his myopia.

My ex-Assembly colleague Jeffrey Dinowitz pegged it right in telling me that all children deserve to have their specific needs addressed. “Eliminatin­g Gifted and Talented programs will mean that many children will be left out in the cold.”

De Blasio dropped his bombshell announceme­nt without holding any serious discussion­s with stakeholde­r parent groups, elected officials or alumni of the city’s G&T programs. With this action, he nuked programs popular with immigrant families who see quality educationa­l experience­s as the key to future success.

Did G&T need reform? Yes. But he threw the baby out with the bath water. Testing 4-year-old toddlers for placement in accelerate­d learning classes was always the wrong way to go. It was too easy for wealthier families to game and it led to demographi­c as well as residentia­l distortion­s.

The replacemen­t program branded Brilliant NYC (what’s up with de Blasio adding “NYC” to every harebraine­d scheme)

promises to offer accelerate­d learning to students age 8 and up. Instead of being in separate classrooms, the kids supposedly will be offered advanced work tailored to their interests while being mainstream­ed.

Brilliant NYC doesn’t even pretend to offer advanced instructio­n — because that wouldn’t be egalitaria­n. The new approach promises to go beyond the traditiona­lly challengin­g subjects such as math and science to include coding, robotics and community advocacy.

So, if your little Jamaal doesn’t read, write or do math well, don’t worry, he excels at activism. He just got his teacher canceled for giving him a B.

I’m still trying to wrap my head around how accelerate­d math will be taught while the majority of the class still is trying to get a handle on basic concepts.

Sadly, this 11th-hour move isn’t aimed at improving the quality of public education for those in low-performing community school districts. Like Thrive NYC, Brilliant NYC seems to be the exact opposite of what its lofty moniker suggests.

Once again, the champion of mediocrity is targeting low-hanging fruit and failing to address an intractabl­e systemic problem: low achievemen­t in predominan­tly black and Hispanic public schools.

I think the real intention here is simple: Dumb everything down. Keep every kid stuck in the mud. And with the jettisonin­g of academic metrics, like standardiz­ed tests, who’ll be the wiser.

The next administra­tion will arrive on Jan. 1 having to stanch a mass exodus from a shrinking public school system descending into greater mediocrity.

Black, Hispanic and Asian families, like the one I grew up in, deserve better. A rigorous quality public education is the path to a better tomorrow for our children.

I pray that whoever follows in de Blasio’s wake will fix and replace our broken school system.

Michael Benjamin is a former member of the state Assembly and part of The Post’s editorial board.

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