Disaster The War on Merit Takes a Bizarre Turn - Why are administrators at a top-ranked public high school hiding National Merit awards from students and families?

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For years, two administrators at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology (TJ) have been withholding notifications of National Merit awards from the school’s families, most of them Asian, thus denying students the right to use those awards to boost their college-admission prospects and earn scholarships. This episode has emerged amid the school district’s new strategy of “equal outcomes for every student, without exception.” School administrators, for instance, have implemented an “equitable grading” policy that eliminates zeros, gives students a grade of 50 percent just for showing up, and assigns a cryptic code of “NTI” for assignments not turned in. It’s a race to the bottom.

An intrepid Thomas Jefferson parent, Shawna Yashar, a lawyer, uncovered the withholding of National Merit awards. Since starting as a freshman at the school in September 2019, her son, who is part Arab American, studied statistical analysis, literature reviews, and college-level science late into the night. This workload was necessary to keep him up to speed with the advanced studies at TJ, which U.S. News & World Report ranks as America’s top school.

Last fall, along with about 1.5 million U.S. high school juniors, the Yashar teen took the PSAT, which determines whether a student qualifies as a prestigious National Merit scholar. When it came time to submit his college applications this fall, he didn’t have a National Merit honor to report—but it wasn’t because he hadn’t earned the award. The National Merit Scholarship Corporation, a nonprofit based in Evanston, Illinois, had recognized him as a Commended Student in the top 3 percent nationwide—one of about 50,000 students earning that distinction. Principals usually celebrate National Merit scholars with special breakfasts, award ceremonies, YouTube videos, press releases, and social media announcements.

But not at TJ. School officials had decided to withhold announcement of the award. Indeed, it turns out that the principal, Ann Bonitatibus, and the director of student services, Brandon Kosatka, have been withholding this information from families and the public for years, affecting the lives of at least 1,200 students over the principal’s tenure of five years. Recognition by National Merit opens the door to millions of dollars in college scholarships and 800 Special Scholarships from corporate sponsors.

I learned—two years after the fact—that National Merit had recognized my son, a graduate of TJ’s Class of 2021, as a Commended Student in a September 10, 2020, letter that National Merit sent to Bonitatibus. But the principal, who lobbied that fall to nix the school’s merit-based admission test to increase “diversity,” never told us about it. Parents from earlier years told me that she also didn’t tell them about any Commended Student awards. One former student said he learned he had won the award through a random email from the school to a school-district email account that students rarely check; the principal neither told his parents nor made a public announcement.

On September 16 of this year, National Merit sent a letter to Bonitatibus listing 240 students recognized as Commended Students or Semi-Finalists. The letter included these words in bold type: “Please present the letters of commendation as soon as possible since it is the students’ only notification.”

National Merit hadn’t included enough stamps on the package, but nevertheless it got to Bonitatibus by mid-October—before the October 31 deadline for early acceptance to select colleges. In an email, Bonitatibus told Yashar that she had signed the certificates “within 48 hours.” But homeroom teachers didn’t distribute the awards until Monday, November 14, after the early-application deadlines had passed. Teachers dropped the certificates unceremoniously on students’ desks.

“Keeping these certificates from students is theft by the state,” says Yashar. Bonitatibus didn’t notify parents or the public. What’s more, it could be a civil rights violation, says local parent advocate Debra Tisler, with most TJ students in a protected class of “gifted” students, most of them racial minorities, many with disabilities, and most coming from immigrant families whose parents speak English as a second language. “It’s just cruel,” says Tisler.

In a call with Yashar, Kosatka admitted that the decision to withhold the information from parents and inform the students in a low-key way was intentional. “We want to recognize students for who they are as individuals, not focus on their achievements,” he told her, claiming that he and the principal didn’t want to “hurt” the feelings of students who didn’t get the award. A National Merit spokeswoman said that the organization’s officials “leave this honor exclusively to the high school officials” to announce. Kosatka and Bonitatibus didn’t respond to requests for comment. In a rare admission, Fabio Zuluaga, an assistant superintendent at Fairfax County Public Schools, told me that the school system has erred not telling students, the public, and families about awards: “It was a mistake to be honest.” Zuluaga said it also isn’t enough just to hand over a certificate. “We have to do something special,” he said. “A commendation sends a very strong message to the kid, right? Your work is meaningful. If you work hard in life, there are good benefits from that.”

On Monday, December 12, after getting caught, Kosatka sent an email to the parents of Commended Students, notifying them of the “important recognition” and saying, “We are deeply sorry” for not sharing the news earlier. He claimed school officials would contact college admissions offices to correct the record.

Bonitatibus still hasn’t publicly recognized the students or told parents from earlier years that their students won the awards. And she hasn’t yet delivered the missing certificates. The war on merit is a war on our kids.

https://www.city-journal.org/war-on-merit-takes-bizarre-turn (Archive)
 
cryptic code of “NTI” for assignments not turned in.
okay that's kinda funny, Not  Turned  In I can't imagine how they got the letters NTI...

however this is a fucking big deal.

National Merit Scholarships aren't just this minor little $1000 extra award, they give you free rides - tuition and room/board - at dozens of schools around the country and generous scholarships at the rest. Furthermore, it already accounts for Blacks and Mexicans being more retarded than Whites and Asians because the PSAT score threshold for those 2 minorities is much lower to get a similar award, at least back in 2009. Maybe they don't exist anymore because it was pretty blatant affirmative action.

I feel vicariously hurt and angry for these kids and the school better fucking pay for their Bachelor's degrees or pay off their loans 🌈 🌈 🌈
 
I just hope when they sue the school district/county/state (I mean the kid's mom is a lawyer, how retarded can you be) that they also throw in a personal suit against the little Diana Moon Glampers there.
 
Why stop there? Kids who are performing too high should have to be handicapped to bring down their grades, otherwise they'll hurt the feelings of your C and D students. Athletes should have to carry extra weight so they don't outperform other, less athletic students.
 
Why stop there? Kids who are performing too high should have to be handicapped to bring down their grades, otherwise they'll hurt the feelings of your C and D students. Athletes should have to carry extra weight so they don't outperform other, less athletic students.
Harrison Bergeron didn't go far enough for them.
 
former student said he learned he had won the award through a random email from the school to a school-district email account that students rarely check; the principal neither told his parents nor made a public announcement.
So a student is gifted but cannot be bothered to check the equivalent of his work email.

Things could have gone better but I tht most of this is due to the student not paying attention.
 
So a student is gifted but cannot be bothered to check the equivalent of his work email.

Things could have gone better but I tht most of this is due to the student not paying attention.
Literally no student uses school assigned email for anything, most won't even know it exists.
 
Literally no student uses school assigned email for anything, most won't even know it exists.
In my district, they even tried to email parents and our family didn't realize we weren't getting the emails for years because they kept sending out all the spam with paper.

And no, it wasn't our fault we weren't getting the emails, the district is retarded and collected email addresses with pen and paper and whatever secretary they made transcribe the emails into electronic form was a racist little shithead who thought she knew how to spell our name better than we do and there's no way we could possibly have that combination of letters in our legal name - much less an email address, which doesn't even have to match the legal name! - and she'll just do us a service by fixing that mistake for us. Yes I'm MATI but seriously who knows what private information they were sending to a random stranger on the internet for years?

I'm sure the address they were trying to contact existed and a random stranger was getting the emails, or else the school would have questioned us about the undeliverable email messages and asked us to update the parent address. Unless they weren't paying attention to the undeliverable email notifications, in which case it is not fair for them to expect us to pay attention to our emails. Both because they weren't paying attention to their emails and because they weren't sending anything to us.
 
We want to recognize students for who they are as individuals, not focus on their achievements
These are nerds who went to the trouble of doing extra work, it's almost like working hard and achieving shit is part of who they are as an individual or something.

claiming that he and the principal didn’t want to “hurt” the feelings of students who didn’t get the award
So tell the kids in fucking private if you're that bothered.

“A commendation sends a very strong message to the kid, right? Your work is meaningful. If you work hard in life, there are good benefits from that.”
Isn't working hard and reaping the rewards considered verboten by the left these days?
 
The amount of cultural and economic destruction being performed to avoid admitting the average black IQ is 78 is absolutely astonishing.
 
The amount of cultural and economic destruction being performed to avoid admitting the average black IQ is 78 is absolutely astonishing.
We're essentially killing ourselves, 10,000 years of civilizational progress is now grinding to a halt because we just can't handle the harsh reality that maybe one group of people is a step behind on the evolutionary ladder.

To be blunt, what's so great about them that makes it worth it to throw literally everything away for them? What do they contribute that's so great to make it worth it?

Racism is an unpleasant idea, to be sure, but great fucking day in the morning, we're going to destroy all that is good and decent because we just can't handle the fact that reality isn't always what we want it to be?

I hate to be harsh, but I like low crime rates, rockets to the Moon, math, computers, science, airplanes, automobiles etc more than I like anything blacks have ever contributed to planet Earth.

One day we're going to be forced to choose, civilization or savagery and it isn't going to be pretty when the buck eventually stops and there's no more playing pretend.
 
You just know the national merit scholarship corporation loved turning a blind eye to this in the name of equity, and if you think this is the only school where this is happening then I have a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.
 
I'll just go ahead and put this on the school. School Administration love playing games with the kids under their purvue; I missed out on some dumb fucking award my Senior Year because no one told me I'd be receiving something. Every year the school rented out a hall, had a dinner, and an award ceremony; but you had to buy a ticket to get in. So me thinking I'm not getting anything, decide to skip it, because I'm not gonna pay money to be around a bunch of people I don't like while they congratulate each other. Next Monday at school, endless "Dude, where were you? You missed your award." No one fucking told me, nor did they hand it to me while I was at school, nor did they send it in the mail. School Administrators are petty fucking children, worse than the ones they're supposed to guide.

Racism is an unpleasant idea, to be sure, but great fucking day in the morning, we're going to destroy all that is good and decent because we just can't handle the fact that reality isn't always what we want it to be?

I hate to be harsh, but I like low crime rates, rockets to the Moon, math, computers, science, airplanes, automobiles etc more than I like anything blacks have ever contributed to planet Earth.

One day we're going to be forced to choose, civilization or savagery and it isn't going to be pretty when the buck eventually stops and there's no more playing pretend.
We'll have to kill the bankers/traitors who mandate this shit before we can segregate.
 
Another good article about how this cunt principle is ruining a once highly regarded school:

Typical busybody, White leftist bitch. These people can't kiss nigger's asses enough, they have to bring the entire world down just so they can kiss another.
 
When you have to warp reality and hide information to make one demographic feel better then you're just killing society.

welcome to being white bitch
The squinties have had it worse for a while, for example they get penalties to their SAT scores based on race that are higher than white people, while darkies get massive bonuses. It's a clown world out there:

A study conducted by three researchers at Princeton has concluded that African Americans and Hispanics receive “boosts” equivalent to 230 and 180-point SAT increases, respectively, in college admissions. Asian Americans, meanwhile, are penalized by the equivalent of 50 points.
 
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