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In Era of High School Choice, One District Retains Elite Status

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While Mayor Michael Bloomberg expanded the number of high schools, and trumpeted the benefits of school choice, he allowed an affluent and successful school district to keep its barriers to entry. Some of the city's most desirable high schools give priority to students in District 2, which includes the Upper East Side and parts of downtown Manhattan.

Parents across the city who are looking for academically rigorous high schools said they are attracted to District 2 schools like Baruch College Campus High School and Eleanor Roosevelt High School but they know their children are unlikely to get in because of where they live or, more accurately, where they don't.

Look at the chart of some of the city's most desirable high schools, and how many of them give priority to District 2 students.

School NameBoroughAvg. English ProficiencyAvg. Math ProficiencyNumber of Applicants in 2013Spots open to 9th GradersWho gets priority?
Townsend Harris High SchoolQueens3.784.25471270Students throughout the city
Bard High School Early CollegeManhattan3.594.013060150Students throughout the city
Bard High School Early College, Queens
Queens3.564.072209150Students throughout the city
Baccalaureate School for Global EducationQueens3.523.9176281Students throughout the city; priority to Queens
Scholars' AcademyQueens3.523.92952108Students throughout the city; priority to continuing 8th graders
Eleanor Roosevelt High SchoolManhattan3.493.925733125Students in District 2
Beacon High SchoolManhattan3.443.785459300Students throughout the city
New Explorations into Science, Technology and Math High SchoolManhattan3.383.92633160Students throughout the city
Queens Gateway to Health Sciences Secondary SchoolQueens3.353.591987108Queens Districts 28-29
Millennium High SchoolManhattan3.353.74161150Students in Districts 1 or 2
Leon M. Goldstein High School for the SciencesBrooklyn3.343.834742306Students throughout the city
N.Y.C. Lab School for Collaborative StudiesManhattan3.283.693459136Students in District 2
Columbia Secondary SchoolManhattan3.273.68148696Students throughout the city
Millennium Brooklyn High School
Brooklyn3.243.641152135Brooklyn residents
Baruch College Campus High SchoolManhattan3.243.737461111Students in District 2
NYC iSchoolManhattan3.23.481486118Students throughout the city
Benjamin Banneker AcademyBrooklyn3.183.484310240Students in Districts 13, 14, 15, or 16 in Brooklyn
Brooklyn College AcademyBrooklyn3.183.52331125Brooklyn residents
N.Y.C. Museum SchoolManhattan3.183.582590126Students in District 2
Medgar Evers College Preparatory SchoolBrooklyn3.173.593091232Students throughout the city
The Queens School of InquiryQueens3.143.5352481Queens residents
School of the Future High SchoolManhattan3.143.381210108Students in District 2

(Data taken from Department of Education's 2013 Progress Reports and High School Admissions Directory)

Parents Tanya Khotin and Barbara Reiser live in neighboring District 3 in Manhattan. Speaking recently outside of Baruch on East 25th Street, they noted the small school received more than 7,400 applications for about 100 ninth-grade seats.

"As an academically screened school with fantastic graduation rates, college enrollment and other criteria, they’re able to fill their 120 seats with students in District 2, and cannot offer the same kind of access to equally qualified kids from outside of District 2," said Khotin.

"What is the justification to have one area of the city have one rule and another area of the city does not?" added Reiser.

WNYC's Schoolbook looked at the most academically competitive high schools, not including the specialized high schools which rely on a single admissions test. Most give equal access to kids all over the city, including the prestigious Beacon High School in District 3. District 2 is an exception. It gives priority to local residents for its screened schools, such as the Lab School for Collaborative Studies.

Other districts give some degree of priority to borough residents for some of their high schools, but these aren't considered nearly as academic or sought-after.

Bloomberg administration officials called District 2 priority a "legacy issue," and said they've worked to open more schools throughout Manhattan that are open to all students. In fact, District 2 has 68 high schools - most of which are open to all, said Shino Takinawa, president of the District 2 Community Education Council.

Although she's sympathetic to the parents in other districts, she  said opening the six selective schools to all would create an even more elite environment.

"It would make it impossible for really anyone to get in except for the really cream of the crop top students," she said, adding that other districts should fight for better schools the way District 2 did over the last few decades.


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