From the New York Times news section:

Beacon High School Is Half White. That’s Why Students Walked Out. More than 300 students at the selective public high school, one of New York City’s most prestigious, protested its admissions policies. By Eliza Shapiro

Dec. 2, 2019 Naia Timmons, a junior from Harlem, stood surrounded by classmates in the middle of the street outside Beacon High School as hail began to fall. She shouted into a bullhorn: “I continue to recognize the privilege I had of escaping the system that many of my friends could not.” Naia identifies as black and white. Her classmates chanted “End Jim Crow” and “Education is a right, not just for the rich and white.” Roughly 300 students walked out of Beacon on Monday to protest its high-stakes admissions process, which they said has exacerbated segregation in the nation’s largest school system. The protest at Beacon, one of New York City’s most selective public schools, illustrates the widening scope of the push for school integration. It has shifted away from the narrow issue of how few black and Hispanic students are admitted to the city’s eight specialized high schools, including Stuyvesant. Beacon’s student population is about half white, a striking anomaly in a public school system that is nearly 70 percent black and Hispanic.

Here are the official stats from the NYC school district for Beacon, which is at 544 W. 44th St. in Hell’s Kitchen, near Times Square:

Student Demographics

Asian: 9%

Black: 14%

Hispanic or Latinx: 20%

White: 47%

English language learners: 0%

Students with special needs: 11%

So, whites are a minority at Beacon, which is an interesting Current Year definition of “segregation.” But clearly, the school is Taking Steps to keep kids who can’t speak English or who are retarded out of the school.

Beacon is not a specialized high school — it has no admissions test — but its highly competitive admissions process requires students to assemble a portfolio of middle school work, admissions essays and high standardized test scores and grades. It is one of the most selective schools in New York: Last year, there were over 5,800 applications for 360 ninth-grade seats. Beacon has a higher percentage of black and Hispanic students than Stuyvesant — about 32 percent compared to 4 percent at the specialized school — but also a higher percentage of white students, fewer Asian students and a lower percentage of students living in poverty. The school’s parent-teacher organization raised over $685,000 for the school last year, according to data released on Monday. … Mr. de Blasio’s daughter, Chiara, attended Beacon. … But Sadie also said that she sometimes felt isolated at the school, which was about 9 percent Asian last year. She had exclusively white teachers last year. Sometimes people at the school confused her with another Asian-American girl in one of her classes, she said. Sometimes she was asked where she was from and whether she spoke Chinese.

Someday, she fears, somebody will ask to touch her hair.