New York City bases admissions to its eight “specialized” high schools entirely upon scores on a single standardized test. This policy, hotly contested when it was codified by state law in 1971, faces renewed political and legal attacks today. Single-test admissions consistently result in alarmingly low levels of African-American and Hispanic enrollment at the most sought-after specialized schools. This brief essay compares today’s debate to that of 1971. It notes two major developments since then. The City now has eight test-only high schools, not three. Moreover, the eight schools now function in the larger context of New York’s system of city-wide high school choice. Given city-wide choice, and notwithstanding the dramatic demographic in...
Although admission to New York City\u27s elite public high schools has been controversial because of...
Beginning in 2002, with the election of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New York City’s Department of Educa...
High-stakes testing policies did not emerge in an education policy vacuum. Part I of this Article in...
New York City bases admissions to its eight “specialized” high schools entirely upon scores on a sin...
New York City's elite public specialized high schools have a long history of offering a rigorous col...
It’s Elementary is a series of essays on topics in education and education policy. The main focus is...
High stakes tests have become the centerpiece of new educational reform movements within the United ...
New York has the most segregated public school system of any state in America. Nearly seven decades ...
Until the turn of the 21st century, high school graduation rates in New York City hovered at or belo...
A new New York City program makes sure that the hardest part about taking the SAT is not paying the ...
The impact of admissions process design on the racial diversity of schools and colleges has sparked ...
During the last few decades, schools in New York City (NYC) have experienced great demographic chang...
The New York City (NYC) public school system is one of the most segregated in the country. This Note...
Abstract This paper uses data from three prominent exam high schools in New York City to estimate th...
Survey and focus group sampling of students in high achieving schools compared to lower achieving sc...
Although admission to New York City\u27s elite public high schools has been controversial because of...
Beginning in 2002, with the election of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New York City’s Department of Educa...
High-stakes testing policies did not emerge in an education policy vacuum. Part I of this Article in...
New York City bases admissions to its eight “specialized” high schools entirely upon scores on a sin...
New York City's elite public specialized high schools have a long history of offering a rigorous col...
It’s Elementary is a series of essays on topics in education and education policy. The main focus is...
High stakes tests have become the centerpiece of new educational reform movements within the United ...
New York has the most segregated public school system of any state in America. Nearly seven decades ...
Until the turn of the 21st century, high school graduation rates in New York City hovered at or belo...
A new New York City program makes sure that the hardest part about taking the SAT is not paying the ...
The impact of admissions process design on the racial diversity of schools and colleges has sparked ...
During the last few decades, schools in New York City (NYC) have experienced great demographic chang...
The New York City (NYC) public school system is one of the most segregated in the country. This Note...
Abstract This paper uses data from three prominent exam high schools in New York City to estimate th...
Survey and focus group sampling of students in high achieving schools compared to lower achieving sc...
Although admission to New York City\u27s elite public high schools has been controversial because of...
Beginning in 2002, with the election of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New York City’s Department of Educa...
High-stakes testing policies did not emerge in an education policy vacuum. Part I of this Article in...