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Zohran Mamdani declares war on excellence: He plans to phase out the Gifted and Talented program in New York City schools
Spectator World ^ | 10/05/2025 | David Sypher Jr.

Posted on 10/05/2025 5:58:36 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

New York Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani has a bold plan for the city’s schools: phase out the Gifted and Talented program in elementary education. His rationale is that these programs create disparities and feed inequality. It’s a familiar progressive argument. If some students are excelling, others must be suffering. If a child is recognized as gifted, it’s unfair to those who aren’t.

The logic is as simple as it is destructive: equality means sameness, even if sameness means mediocrity.

There is nothing wrong with recognizing giftedness. In fact, it’s common sense. If a child demonstrates unusual ability in math, science, writing, or the arts, you nurture it. You don’t bury it under a misguided notion of “equity.” Excellence, like athletic talent, must be cultivated. No one suggests we should stop training promising young athletes because not every child can make varsity. Yet in academics, this kind of reasoning now passes as justice.

Mamdani’s proposal rests on a zero-sum view of education: if gifted students are challenged, average or struggling students are deprived. But reality says otherwise. The failure of struggling students has little to do with the success of gifted ones and everything to do with broken leadership, failing priorities and an education bureaucracy that confuses slogans for solutions.

Worse, eliminating gifted programs doesn’t remove inequality; it cements it. Wealthy parents will always find ways to give their children an edge – through tutoring, test prep, extracurriculars, or private schools. It’s the working-class family, the immigrant striver, the ambitious child from a modest neighborhood, who loses the most when public pathways for talent are shut down. Mamdani’s policy would not reduce inequality; it would entrench it.

Of course, defenders of his plan will say New York is already taking steps to help struggling students. And to some degree, they’re right. The city has launched NYC Reads, a phonics-based literacy initiative designed to reverse years of damage caused by failed reading instruction. It has trained literacy coaches and rolled out new programs to engage parents. Nonprofits and community groups also step in with tutoring and mentorship programs. These efforts matter – and they are a good start.

But notice what’s missing. Schools still don’t give teachers systematic flexibility to intervene when students start falling behind across subjects. Mentorship and tutoring programs exist, but they aren’t scaled to reach every struggling child who needs one. And schools rarely celebrate excellence outside the narrow band of standardized tests. A student with a gift for music, or technical trades, or entrepreneurship is too often left in the shadows.

This is where conservatives can make a real difference: by insisting that fairness doesn’t mean dragging everyone down to the lowest common denominator. It means raising the floor without lowering the ceiling. It means holding onto gifted programs for those who excel, while building new ladders for those who struggle.

Schools should focus on fundamentals. Every child deserves mastery in reading and math. Early phonics-based literacy and basic numeracy are the non-negotiable building blocks of opportunity.

Teachers should be trusted and given the flexibility to intervene when a student is falling behind, rather than chaining them to rigid, top-down mandates.

Families should be engaged. Strong families remain the greatest equalizer in education. Encourage parents to read with children, reinforce discipline, and support homework routines.

Mentorship and tutoring should be expanded. Churches, civic groups and nonprofits should be scaled up so no struggling student is left without support.

And excellence of all kinds should be celebrated. Not every child will ace calculus, but some will thrive in the arts, athletics, or skilled trades. Schools should dignify these gifts as much as test scores. The tragedy of Mamdani’s proposal is that it reflects a growing cultural fatigue with excellence itself. We live in a moment where fairness is too often defined not by how high the ceiling is, but by how low we can drag it. The logic is perverse: if some shine brighter, then all must be dimmed.

But dimming the brightest lights does not make the room fairer. It makes the whole room darker.

Excellence is not the enemy of equity. Real fairness comes when we allow the child who may one day cure cancer to reach his full potential, while ensuring the child who struggles with reading has every chance to catch up. Both deserve cultivation. Both deserve dignity. And both require rejecting the politics of mediocrity.

New York’s future – and America’s – depends on it.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: andrewcuomo; curtissliwa; defundthepolice; education; ericadams; insanity; kathyhochul; mamdani; newyork; newyorkcity; nyc; schools; zohranmamdani
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1 posted on 10/05/2025 5:58:36 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

It figures. NYC will be changed for the worse under him.


2 posted on 10/05/2025 6:01:21 PM PDT by KittyKares
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To: SeekAndFind

A city of Islamic retards. A fitting end to the big apple. Was always rotten to the core and now the maggots have infested and destroyed all.


3 posted on 10/05/2025 6:03:38 PM PDT by Battlestar (Tired of transgenders, drug addicts, and mentally ill taking over our streets, schools, government)
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To: SeekAndFind

Nelson ha ha!


4 posted on 10/05/2025 6:05:09 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (The issue is never the issue. The issue is always the revolution.)
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To: SeekAndFind

This is just what I would expect from a dyed in the wool radical socialist ‘Equality’ above everything else an age old dream which will never materialize. Just hearing him expressing this thought tells me he still has a lot of growing up to do.


5 posted on 10/05/2025 6:08:20 PM PDT by Saintgermain ( )
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To: SeekAndFind

Of course, cant have kids growing up to be SMART, instead they will grow up, be retards so they can become lil Dem voters


6 posted on 10/05/2025 6:10:57 PM PDT by Sarah Barracuda
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To: Saintgermain

Kurt Vonnegut was a prophet.


7 posted on 10/05/2025 6:14:02 PM PDT by dasboot (Nuanced foreign relations is the germ of international misunderstanding. )
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To: SeekAndFind

Madmani is going to start a Hogs and Jackasses program.


8 posted on 10/05/2025 6:17:06 PM PDT by FlingWingFlyer (The New DemonRAT Amerika! If you don't like your political opponent, kill them and their family.)
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To: SeekAndFind

New York Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, I wonder how he would feel about a medical doctor treating him who graduated in the top 10% of their class because of merit vs. someone who graduated in the bottom 5% of their class because of I don’t know, entitlement?


9 posted on 10/05/2025 6:24:59 PM PDT by kawhill ("I'm going to miss your stories, Robert. You have your own ones now.")
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To: SeekAndFind

Time to get out of NYC.


10 posted on 10/05/2025 6:43:43 PM PDT by cymbeline
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To: Battlestar

What happened to the 6pm Hamas treaty deadline?


11 posted on 10/05/2025 6:46:39 PM PDT by Getready (Wisdom is more valuable than gold and harder to find.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Uhhhhhhh...

..there was one?


12 posted on 10/05/2025 6:48:09 PM PDT by Texas Eagle ("Throw me to the wolves and I'll return leading the pack"- Donald J. Trump)
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To: SeekAndFind

In high school I got slapped unwillingly into the Gifted and Talented program.

For me, it was the best (worst?) way on earth to get “nerd” instantly painted on my back when my greatest desire was to remain invisible.

😑

The one upside was that I could blow off the standard curriculum, which meant less people around me.

50 years later, those I went to school with still throw it in my face.

GeekMander


13 posted on 10/05/2025 6:58:00 PM PDT by Salamander (Please visit my profile page to help me go home again. https://www.givesendgo.com/GCRRD)
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To: SeekAndFind

Not at all surprising. Collectivists like Madmani hate achievement. An always underlying theme of every Ayn Rand work.


14 posted on 10/05/2025 7:10:03 PM PDT by Robwin ( )
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To: SeekAndFind

Inbred Islamic students can’t use these programs anyway.


15 posted on 10/05/2025 7:12:14 PM PDT by ArcadeQuarters (You can't remove RINOs by voting for them!)
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To: Saintgermain

What evidence is there that Mamdani has any experience running a complicated city like NYC?
When I look into his eyes I see contempt for the dumb masses he’s fooled into believing he can deliver on his policies. He knows when it fails he can blame the Evil Rich and Republicans for the systemic failure. Where it goes from there is the big question.


16 posted on 10/05/2025 7:17:36 PM PDT by griswold3 (Truth Beauty and Goodness)
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To: SeekAndFind

He is exactly what NY and NYC deserve.


17 posted on 10/05/2025 7:18:32 PM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again," )
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To: SeekAndFind
Slobdami can make edicts till the cows come home, but he can't raise the IQ of even one tawny youth.

18 posted on 10/05/2025 7:20:42 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie ( O give thanks unto the Lord, for He is gracious, and his mercy endures forever. — Psalm 106)
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To: KittyKares

If he cuts all gifted programs since not everyone can be gifted.
Then will he cut all sports, since not everyone excels at sports.
No band, clubs, no class musicals, no one gets to decide which class to choose.
Everyone takes the same class , oh, no special ed classes, no individualized learning programs.
How far will he push the idea that everyone is the same.


19 posted on 10/05/2025 7:31:47 PM PDT by midwest_hiker
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To: SeekAndFind

Does anyone really have to argue over his policies?
He pretends he is a socialist to the downtrodden failure voters of NYC. He’s really an Islamic Trojan Horse.
Lying to the masses of idiots in NYC. Instead of the law of the jungle in NYC...it will be the law of the Caliphate.Look at the mayors of London, and Dearborn....


20 posted on 10/05/2025 8:14:44 PM PDT by Getready (Wisdom is more valuable than gold and harder to find.)
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