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No More Gifted Students in Mamdani’s New York City
Abolishing the program would do the most harm to those who are cited most often as deserving of help. (Deb Cohn-Orbach/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Ending the gifted and talented program in public schools is the opposite of what parents want and kids need.
By Maud Maron
02.04.26 — Education
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New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani is facing criticism for his plans to phase out the public school system’s gifted and talented (G&T) program for kindergarten, starting next year. This feels like Groundhog Day for public school parents like me who fought former mayor Bill de Blasio’s efforts to end G&T, abolish entrance exams for the city’s prestigious specialized high schools, and root out, in the name of “anti-racism,” any honors program that smacked of academic excellence.

The same tired arguments about the racism of meritocracy are still unconvincing and are still unsupported by data or evidence, yet tenaciously hang on like land acknowledgments, “hands up, don’t shoot” chants, and the idea that socialism will actually work this time.


Read
How Zohran Mamdani Could Kill New York’s Schools

No matter what happens to the New York City school system, which had 906,248 students during the 2024–25 school year and is the largest in the United States, Mamdani’s first month as mayor will be forever marred by the deaths of 16 people who “passed away outside during this brutal stretch of cold,” as he put it on Monday. The new mayor reversed a policy by predecessor Eric Adams that would have allowed the police to get the homeless inside. Mamdani’s brand of progressivism essentially handcuffed the police in order to “protect” the homeless from the very people who might have saved their lives.

About 18,000 elementary school students in the city are enrolled in G&T, with about 2,500 admitted for kindergarten each fall.

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Maud Maron
Maud Maron is a co-founder of PLACE NYC, which advocates for improving the academic rigor of New York City public schools. She also lives, writes, and shouts into the void in New York City. Find her at @MaudMaron on X.
Tags:
Zohran Mamdani
Policy
New York City
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