NYC Panel Renews Contract for Controversial Specialized High Schools Admissions Test

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NYC Panel Renews Contract for Controversial Specialized High Schools Admissions Test
SHSATSpecialized High SchoolsNYC Education
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The New York City Department of Education's Panel for Education Policy voted to renew the contract with Pearson to administer the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test (SHSAT). The vote, which was delayed twice, was met with both support and opposition from students and parents. The SHSAT will transition to a digital format and eventually adopt a computer-adaptive model.

The city Department of Education’s Panel for Education Policy voted during its Wednesday night meeting to renew the contract with education company Pearson , which has administered the state-mandated admissions exam for the eight elite schools since 1983.

The panel voted 14 to two — with four abstentions — to approve the renewal during the meeting at Sunset Park High School, which was packed with hundreds of students and parents advocating for the continuation of the entrance exam.A man holds a “KEEP SHSAT” sign at a Panel for Education Policy meeting in Sunset Park High School on Wednesday.Students entering into the freshman class of 2026 will now be given a digital version of the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test — which is the sole criteria for entry into Gotham’s elite public schools like Bronx High School of Science, Stuyvesant, and Brooklyn Tech among others. Wisconsin school shooting victim ID'd as 14-year-old freshman and educator, 42, after Natalie ‘Samantha’ Rupnow's rampageSchool shooter was in therapy over troubled home life that saw parents repeatedly divorce — before deadly rampage The test will eventually adopt a computer-adaptive model — which uses algorithms to personalize a test based on a student’s performance. The PEP vote, which was delayed in October and then again in November, left the close to 30,000 families whose children had prepared for the exam anxious that they’d end up in education limbo. Dozens of supporters of the entrance test spoke ahead of the vote as the meeting extended late into the night. “ protects a fair, objective admission process for specialized high schools — institutions that serve as a pathway for successful, hard-working students — many of whom come from immigrant families, like mine, low-income households and underserved communities,” one student testified.“For me, the SHSAT was more than just a test. It was a goal that motivated me to study harder and push my limits,” the student said.Councilwoman Susan Zhuang, who represents the Asian-majority 43rd District in Brooklyn, said a number of students from her district don’t come from money — as critics of the test suggested — and are predominantly “migrants.” “These kids are not from rich families, who have private tutors or private schools, the kids come from hard-working, low- and middle-class families,” she said during the public commentary period. “This test, in particular, is a lifeline for underrepresented and low-income immigrant students who can now access some of the best public schools in the country.” Meanwhile, critics used the lengthy delays as an opportunity to once again decry the tests’ alleged racial bias. One of the PEP panel members who abstained from the vote Wednesday night said there “can be a problem with the system and the test.” “When I look at the numbers and see 17 districts disenfranchised by a test where one district can have 548 offers, and the 17 other districts in this city add up to 528 combined. There is a problem,” dad of three public school kids Thomas Sheppard said. Another panel member, Jessamyn Lee said she voted against the exam contract because the panel hasn’t seen what the new test will look like. “The test your children who are sitting in sixth grade are prepared for is not the test they will be administered,” Lee said, adding that a vote for it is “reckless and irresponsible.”The panel voted 14 to two — with four abstentions — to renew the contract with education company Pearson, which has administered the controversial state-mandated admissions exam for the eight elite schools since 1983.Of that, 4.5% of offers went to Black students and 7.6% to Latino students, according to city data. For years, critics have clashed with supporters of the SHSAT over whether specialized schools should only admit students based on a standardized test.PEP chair Greg Faulkner told The Post scrapping the test falls outside the purview of city officials, with the test mandated under state law.Faulkner said he’d still raise concerns about the entrance exam with Albany through a separate committee. For now, however, New York City kids prepping to get into the 2026 freshman class of these elite schools can breathe a sigh of relief. Wisconsin school shooting victim ID'd as 14-year-old freshman and educator, 42, after Natalie ‘Samantha’ Rupnow's rampageABC's George Stephanopoulos was repeatedly warned not to use word 'rape' by producer -- but said it anyway: sourcesSydney Sweeney ditches her top on rooftop in NYC after clapping back at body shamersChristina Aguilera, 44, poses in her ‘birthday suit’ after dismissing Ozempic rumorsRoad to recovery for Knicks' Mitchell Robinson | The Injury Report A man holds a"KEEP SHSAT" sign at a Panel for Education Policy meeting in Sunset Park High School on Wednesday.The panel voted 14 to two -- with four abstentions -- to renew the contract with education company Pearson, which has administered the controversial state-mandated admissions exam for the eight elite schools since 1983.

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