That's not true. They changed the process to end the widespread cheating that resulted in only students from a few wealthy feeders getting selected into this program. |
Nope. Diversity. Why else would you see an increase in SPED, ESOL, and URMs? Also, quotas from middle schools. I think we need to see the math class of the kids from the "quota" middle schools. I bet there are some out there where not a single Geometry kid was picked and only SPED, ESOL, and URMs. |
It would be one thing if the situation corrected itself with kids returning to their base school when they are in over their heads (and many of them do) but for some of these kids, their identity gets wrapped up in being a TJ student even if they are barely scraping along with C's and they just muddle through and have a worse life than they would have had graduating from their base school. |
That is contrary to almost all the reporting at the time. The change was obviously about race. |
They didn’t want FEWER Asian kids, they wanted MORE kids beyond the affluent feeders, including URMs, ELLs, etc. That’s why they ADDED SEATS as part of the change. The TJ test prep industry made it a pay-to-play process. For a public high school. This only exacerbated the lack of URMs. The community was appalled for years by lack of URMs as well as the unfair advantage that affluent parents had. Both reasons are well documented. |
There aren’t “demographic quotas” - maybe you meant geographic allocations. |
Well said. |
Wrong, it was to stop the widespread cheating. Everyone knows this. |
Yep, it's a race-blind process that primarily benefited low-income Asians, and Asian enrollment is now at a historic high even. |
There was the "reported" reason and there were the actual reasons, some of which were the same and some of which were different. Not sure why you think you know better if you weren't paying any attention then. |
Why? And so what? Perhaps the kids from those schools were all in Alg1. Who cares? There have always been Alg 1 students who have attended and successfully navigated TJ - and even thrived! But you're going to use math advancement as a proxy for who is more "deserving" by claiming that those students "will be able to access the most advanced math and physics courses at TJ" - even though most students who are extremely advanced when they enter TJ choose not to do so. You lost, and the next access point for you to maybe win will be the School Board elections in 2027. And I seriously doubt that you're going to have the kind of momentum that you need at that point if you didn't have enough in 2023 to get even ONE conservative elected county-wide. The school will either succeed or fail under the new admissions criteria and right now, in the first year with an entire population of the new admissions process, things are going fine. Go find a battle to wage online that doesn't involve you disparaging a bunch of children that didn't select the admissions process that they participated in. |
You can't push a rope but a student that studies more is going to have a significant advantage and eventually a permanent advantage over one that studies less. Trying to correct for different levels of studying to nullify the advantage of studying is civilizational suicide. Trying to do it because of the skin color of who is studying and who is not studying is racist. My decades of experience with gifted kids at Stuyvesant, Bronx science, Brooklyn Tech and TJ have made this abundantly clear. The kids who succeed tend to put in more work. Hard work beats talent if talent doesn't work hard. Why the fck wouldn't we encourage academically gifted kids not to work hard? We don't encourage talented athletes not to practice hard. We don't encourage talented musicians not to practice hard. We don't encourage talented artists to make less art. But we should encourage talented students to take it easy on the studying?
The TJ prep program at Curie is a $300 6 week test prep course. Everything else is studying. Can you tell me the difference between the educational enrichment course at curie and what you would call generally valuable studying? What exactly did the TJ test measure that wasn't covered by the 6 week prep course that isn't reflective of general academic knowledge and ability? There is this unsubstantiated assumption that these classes are giving these kids some secret sauce that noone else has access to. There is no secret sauce. And if there is a secret sauce, why are we keeping it a secret? Don't level the field by blowing it up. level the field by making the test transparent and easy to prep for. The PSAT is transparent and easy to prep for.
The demographics that benefited the most was white kids. Hands down. White admissions went from 86 to 140. It stands to reason because when you pick randomly, you are going to get a lot of white kids. Why would you presume that the cultural profile of the asian kids admitted in 2025 is the same as the cultural profile of the asian kids admitted in 2024? We're not all chinese. You really think that the only reason a wealthy student would do better than poor students is because of places like curie? Stuyvesant uses a single test. A very transparent, well understood, well publicized test. You can walk into any bookstore and buy a test prep book for the SHSAT in NYC. I'm sure an expensive tutor can help a less motivated student do better on the test than a $20 barron's book. And yet the students at stuyvesant are overwhelmingly asian and most of those asians are poor (FARM). |
This is contrary to all the news stories at the time and all the testimony at the hearings and all the communication between the board members. This was clearly about a concern over the lack of URM and on the heels of the BLM movement. |
Asian population has dropped despite the class size increasing. |
I was at the hearings. The change was quite clearly about race. A lot of it was pro-black and pro-hispanic but a significant portion of it was anti-asian. |