New York Post

SYSTEM GETS ‘F’

Lottery fails 8th-grader with 100 GPA

- By DEIRDRE BARDOLF

Four published books, debate trophies, perfect attendance and a 100 GPA weren’t enough to get a Queens eighth-grader into her dream high school.

Kristina Raevsky, 14, found out on March 7 she wasn’t accepted to Townsend Harris High School in Flushing because of a lottery system that grouped her perfect test scores with kids who scored over a 94.

“I was shocked,” Raevsky told The Post. “Everyone I told said, ‘How is this possible?’ And I told them, ‘I don’t know, it isn’t me that is the problem. The system is the problem.

“Prior to the lottery, before COVID, my mindset was, ‘Well, I have a 100 average, I’m at the top of my class, I have perfect attendance, and I did well on the state tests . . . what could possibly go wrong?’ ”

But Raevsky’s attendance record and stellar GPA were no longer factors in the admissions process, which, since 2022, uses a combinatio­n of seventh-grade core subject grades, an essay and a two-minute video submission. Kids are then sorted into five groups based on their performanc­e and then subject to a lottery.

“That’s where all the subjectivi­ty comes in,” the Forest Hills student said of the writing and video portions. “If you ask me what to do to change the system, I would say put it back to the way it was when we had objective measures like state tests.

“The lottery determined my fate. At the end of all this, I was reduced to a lottery number,” Raevsky said.

Her poor lottery number put her in the 72nd percentile of applicants.

“Life is not a lottery,” she added. “When you go into the medical field, the law field, every single field, everything is based on merit.”

Before the pandemic, screened schools like Townsend Harris chose their own admissions criteria. In 2020, former Mayor Bill de Blasio nixed attendance, state tests and letter grades and implemente­d a system where students with an 85 or above were entered into the same lottery pool, in an attempt to diversify selective schools.

In 2022, Chancellor David Banks, under Mayor Adams, brought back screens and narrowed the top tier of kids to those with a 94 or above, which those fighting for highachiev­ing students welcomed.

“Although we agree that it moves high school admissions policy in the right direction, this policy change is just one small step forward after NYC took three very large steps backward,” Raevsky wrote in a Fordham Institute article in 2022.

Raevsky says she was never a 94 student.

“I can tell you from experience that the difference between a 94 and a 100 is miles apart,” said the student, who is on track to be the valedictor­ian at JHS 157.

Raevsky put Townsend Harris, which offers no geographic preference to Queens students, and only one other school on her list of 12 high school choices.

Now, it’s off to nearby parochial school for her, where she was offered a scholarshi­p. Like many families fed up with the system’s policies, hers is bidding farewell to the city Department of Education.

 ?? ?? DREAM DENIED: Kristina Raevsky, 14, wasn’t accepted into her choice school, Townsend Harris High School, despite a 100 average, perfect attendance and other accomplish­ments.
DREAM DENIED: Kristina Raevsky, 14, wasn’t accepted into her choice school, Townsend Harris High School, despite a 100 average, perfect attendance and other accomplish­ments.

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