Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

NYC public schools to end gifted and talented program

- By Michelle L. Price and Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK — New York City will phase out its program for gifted and talented students that critics say favors whites and Asian American students, while enrolling disproport­ionately few Black and Latino children, in the nation’s largest school system.

Starting in the next school year, the city will stop giving 4-year-olds a screening test used to identify gifted and talented students, according to an outline of the plan released by the city’s education department Friday.

The program admits only 2,500 pupils a year out of 65,000 kindergart­ners citywide.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said the change will help tens of thousands get advanced instructio­n, instead of just a select few.

“The era of judging 4-year-olds based on a single test is over,” he said in a statement. “Every New York City child deserves to reach their full potential, and this new, equitable model gives them that chance.”

The city will instead train all kindergart­en teachers to provide accelerate­d learning in which students use more advanced skills such as robotics, computer coding, community organizing or advocacy on projects while staying in their regular classrooms. The city will also screen students going into third grade to determine if they would benefit from accelerate­d learning in various subjects while staying in their classrooms.

Despite being among the most diverse cities in the United States, New York City’s public schools have long been derided as among the most segregated. Its gifted and talented program has underscore­d many of

the educationa­l system’s inequities.

About three-fourths of the roughly 16,000 students are white or of Asian descent, while Black and Latino students make up the rest — despite accounting for about two-thirds of the city’s 1 million public school children.

Toni Smith-Thompson, who has three children in public schools and who has joined other parents in calling for the dismantlin­g of the city’s gifted and talented program, said the mayor’s move was long overdue.

“It’s really hard in a city that has so much inequality — that has a history of so much inequality — to set up an exclusiona­ry system and then pretend like people are going to equally be able to compete. Public education should not actually be rooted in competitio­n because it’s the right that everyone should have,” Smith-Thompson said.

The program has spawned legal challenges over the years, with opponents charging that it imposed a caste system in public schools.

“After years of fighting, the mayor has finally made a

step to end, or start dismantlin­g, this institutio­nalized racism that we have in our schools,” said another parent, Kaliris Salas.

City education official will hold community meetings in the coming months to discuss the changes with parents and teachers and roll out the full details right before de Blasio’s term ends.

The next mayor could change the program yet again.

New York City currently has 80 elementary schools that offer some accelerate­d instructio­n. City officials have not detailed how much it would cost to expand that to all 800 elementary schools.

The plan, called Brilliant NYC, will require the hiring of additional teachers who are trained to provide that instructio­n.

“As a lifelong educator, I know every child in New York City has talents that go far beyond what a single test can capture and the Brilliant NYC plan will uncover their strengths so they can succeed,” said Schools Chancellor Meisha Porter.

The plan was first reported Friday by The New York Times.

 ?? BRITTAINY NEWMAN/AP ?? Students write and draw positive affirmatio­ns on poster board in August at an elementary school in the Bronx borough of New York.
BRITTAINY NEWMAN/AP Students write and draw positive affirmatio­ns on poster board in August at an elementary school in the Bronx borough of New York.

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