Over the weekend, New York City councilmember Lincoln Restler called for changing the city’s specialized high school admissions process—which currently consists of the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test (SHSAT), used for generations. Restler pointed to Stuyvesant High School’s admissions figures, which, like most years, include very few black students.
SHSAT is an objective exam open to every eighth-grade student and has long identified talent without regard to wealth, race, or connections. “The city should be reinforcing its commitment to the SHSAT and the specialized high schools, not trying to drown them in more equity mandates,” Wai Wah Chin writes. “Adding additional criteria—like class grades, extracurricular activities, or interviews—to the specialized high school admissions process would inject subjectivity and bias, likely favoring those with economic privileges.”
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