New York Post

Listen to the Parents

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It’s the ultimate admission of failure when teachers at your kids’ school tell you that if you want better for your child, you need to go somewhere else. And it’s the ultimate disgrace when the mayor is using his power over the schools to . . . give you fewer places to flee to.

That’s the reality in Queens’ District 29, where fed-up parents are organizing to demand better of the city Department of Education. The area’s a stronghold of the city’s black middle class, but in 2019 (pre-COVID), only 37 percent of its black students in grades 3-8 could pass the state English exam, and just 28 percent passed the math test.

The DOE pretends the problems are rooted in a lack of resources, but it spends more than $25,000 per student — far more than other area schools that deliver better results, but aren’t DOE-run.

District 29 enrollment has dropped 12.6 percent since 2016-17 as parents find other solutions. Teachers at a school in Cambria Heights outright told one mom that the only way to help her son succeed was to get him into another school.

Another mother, Judith Nephew, decided to pull her son out of PS 52 in Jamaica, where 73 percent of students fail the state math exam and 67 percent fail the English assessment. The boy won the lottery for a spot at Success Academy and quickly went from a third-grader who couldn’t read to being one of the best readers in his class.

Yet Mayor de Blasio and his DOE have done all they can to smother charter-school growth.

Some politician­s are paying attention: The area’s state senator, Democrat Leroy Comrie, writes: “It is time for the DOE to come to the community not with open ears, but rather a strategic blueprint for how to turn District 29 around and a team of tested individual­s who can lead the charge.”

Queens electeds already played a key role in pushing de Blasio to finally give Success a permanent home for its new middle school in the area. Expect these pols to push hard for action on Comrie’s demand for a serious plan.

Are de Blasio and Chancellor Meisha Ross Porter listening? They should produce that plan long before the next mayor takes over Jan. 1. With children’s future at stake, there’s no excuse for waiting.

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