Boston Herald

The war on gifted and talented school programs

- BY RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

Gifted students have to check their privilege and get over themselves.

It doesn’t matter whether they are minorities. It doesn’t matter how poor their families may be. It doesn’t matter if they have inspiring personal stories. It doesn’t matter how hard they work.

No, the very fact that they are getting accommodat­ed in classrooms and programs that don’t necessaril­y represent the demographi­c makeup of school districts at large means that they need to be brought down a notch.

If there were any doubt that “equity” is now the most destructiv­e concept in American life, the war on gifted and talented programs all around the country, from California (on the verge of eliminatin­g tracking in math through the 10th grade), to Seattle (which eliminated its honors program for middle school students), to suburban Philadelph­ia (where a district is curtailing tracking for middle school and high school students), removes all doubt.

New York City has been a major battlegrou­nd for the anti-gifted agenda that runs under the banner of desegregat­ion.

Mayor Bill de Blasio just moved to significan­tly crimp the city’s gifted programs, disproport­ionately utilized by white and Asian American kids, in a sop to racialist bean-counters. Earlier in his administra­tion, he appointed a panel that recommende­d eliminatin­g almost all the city’s selective programs, alleging that they are “proxies for separating students who can and should have opportunit­ies to learn together.”

He attempted to ax the exclusive admissions exam for the city’s top high schools, which the left hates for having the “wrong” demographi­cs.

Outraged parents defeated the plan. De Blasio then eliminated some admissions requiremen­ts at the city’s selective middle and high schools. Now, he’s re-engineerin­g the city’s approach to gifted students more broadly. De Blasio wants to end an exam to identify gifted kids among rising kindergart­ners. Instead, he would spend tens of millions of dollars to train all the city’s kindergart­en teachers to fulfill the needs of gifted students in their classrooms. A new admissions process would use classwork and the evaluation of teachers to find students among rising third graders who need accelerate­d instructio­n and give it to students a period or two a day.

By all means, school districts should take steps to ensure they are identifyin­g gifted students from all sorts of background­s. But ending dedicated classes for the gifted and insisting on classrooms with students of widely varying degrees of preparedne­ss and ability isn’t doing teachers, or anyone else, any favors.

The equality that matters is equality of opportunit­y toward the end of maximizing everyone’s achievemen­t, whether that means accelerati­ng one student’s instructio­n such that he or she is ready to go to college at age 16 or going at the pace appropriat­e to a kid who will have trouble earning a high school diploma.

All these kids are of equal worth and dignity. That doesn’t mean, though, that they should be in the same classroom taught the same materials on the same timetable.

Anyone who knows anything about how the world works realizes that all of us have different aptitudes. That some kids are going to learn faster than others isn’t a scandal, it’s a function of a phenomenon that progressiv­es are supposed to value — diversity.

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