editorial
Stopping the city school brain drain
For decades, the ‘gifted and talented’
program has given some of the
sharpest young minds in the New York
City public school system a chance to
challenge themselves, hone their skills
and cultivate their minds to their fullest
potential.
But if a group of education reformers
whispering in the ears of Mayor
Bill de Blasio and Schools Chancellor
Richard Carranza have it their way,
the gifted and talented program will
soon be a thing of the past.
The School Diversity Advisory
Group recommended last month that
the Department of Education (DOE)
dismiss the program in the name of
equality. They claim that the screening
system in place disproportionately
leaves out students of color, and contributes
to segregation in the nation’s
largest public school district.
But the group’s assertion that the
gifted and talented program, by itself,
is the cause of segregation is a deeply
fl awed argument. It’s also the same argument
made by those seeking to eliminate
entrance exams for the city’s
specialized high schools, for the very
same reason: a lack of equality and opportunity
BRONX TIMES REPORTER, S 12 EPTEMBER 6-12, 2019 BTR
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for all.
Make no mistake, there is a troubling
lack of equality and opportunity
in New York City public school
education. A shameful segregation indeed
persists to this day in classrooms
across the most progressive city in
America.
But specialized education programs
or standardized tests are not
to blame for this condition. Decades
of failed education policy in New York
City, rather, have left behind public
school students across the city.
Simply put, this city has not invested
enough in its future. It has not
provided enough resources to public
schools in every corner of every borough
to operate at its optimum level. It
has not provided enough in the way of
after-school educational programs and
free tutoring for students to achieve
high marks and qualify for specialized
schools or the gifted and talented
program.
To turn things around and truly
open up opportunity for all public
school students, we need to invest in
them. That costs billions of our taxpayer
dollars, of course, and requires
a steady amount of work to ensure that
everything goes according to plan.
In short, it’s hard. It requires work,
patience and diligence. It’s not an easy
remedy. But it just so happens to be the
right one.
Getting rid of programs such as
gifted and talented risks a tremendous
brain drain in New York. If the
city cannot help its sharpest young
minds reach their full potential, and
if the city cannot help all of its students
reach their full potential, they
will wither away from boredom and
neglect. Likewise, if the city cannot
solve its segregation problem without
investing in better schools, better
teachers and better programs for
all its students, it should expect more
of the same, regardless of reforms
made.
Mayor de Blasio and Chancellor
Carranza must do the right thing, for
once, and invest in the city’s future,
rather than tear it down.
Robert Pozarycki
Elected offi cials held a rally calling for the Gifted and Talented Program to continue and expand.
Photo by Mark Hallum
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