Bank Street School – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Tue, 06 Jan 2026 17:27:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Bank Street School – 社区黑料 32 32 How Zohran Mamdani Bucked the Establishment and Won Election 鈥 in Middle School /article/how-zohran-mamdani-bucked-the-establishment-and-won-election-in-middle-school/ Mon, 05 Jan 2026 22:20:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1026636 In the fall of 2004, with the 9/11 terrorist attacks and Iraq War fresh in their minds, middle-schoolers at New York City鈥檚 held a mock presidential election. 

The rules were simple: Only eighth-graders could run. Seventh-graders could vote, but 鈥渉ad to just sit and watch,鈥 as former student John McAuliff remembers, playing as special interest groups.

The seventh-graders weren鈥檛 having it.


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Eighth-graders that fall 鈥渨eren’t interested in politics,鈥 recalled classmate Evan Roth Smith. 鈥淢eanwhile, our year was just chock full of, as it turned out, people who were already obsessed with politics.鈥

Among them was a bright, charismatic, soccer-loving 12-year-old named Zohran Mamdani. That fall, he, McAuliff and Smith plotted a stealth campaign that would overturn the game鈥檚 political establishment. Smith would be Mamdani鈥檚 running mate, McAuliff their campaign manager.

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks at a Brooklyn library in December. Mamdani attended the progressive Bank Street School, which ex-classmates and teachers say played a key role in nurturing his love of politics.  (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Among their key plays: Appeal to the youth vote, said McAuliff 鈥 in this case 鈥渆ight-year-olds to 12-year-olds, basically,鈥 who felt they were being taken for granted by the simulation鈥檚 two major parties.

A page from the Bank Street School for Children yearbook featuring Zohran Mamdani (center) surrounded by classmates John McAuliff (left) and Evan Roth Smith. (Courtesy of Evan Roth Smith)

After persuading teachers to let them run an independent-party primary 鈥 other kids ran as Greens, Libertarians, Communists and the like 鈥 Mamdani and his friends created their own entity: the COW Party, promising free chocolate milk at lunch. They created posters that riffed on the 鈥溾 ads and, after persuading a classmate representing the National Organization for Women to endorse them, adopted the slogan, 鈥淚 Want a COW Right NOW!鈥

鈥淲e were all sort of trying to poke holes in the world around us and trying to make it a more fair, caring place,鈥 said McAuliff. 

Evan Roth Smith

Twenty-one years later, teachers and classmates who watched Mamdani campaign in 2004 鈥 and who saw him advance through Bank Street more broadly 鈥 say the storied, progressive private school, located since 1970 on Manhattan鈥檚 Upper West Side, played a key role in forging his public personality and nurturing his love of politics. They say it also informed the improbable in which the avowed state assemblyman became New York City鈥檚 mayor on New Year鈥檚 Day.

鈥淭he school did the right thing by letting a bunch of kids who were really into something play a bigger role in it than the kids who weren’t,鈥 said Smith, now a . 鈥淭hat was prescient in terms of exactly what Zohran did over this last year.鈥

In its wisdom, Smith said, the school in 2004 enabled Mamdani and his pals to engage in a timeless political maneuver: If the establishment isn鈥檛 delivering, 鈥渟omeone has to beat down the door.鈥

鈥楾he fifth-graders loved him鈥

Founded more than a century ago in New York鈥檚 West Village, the school, part of a larger , has long espoused a hands-on philosophy of learning. First-graders, for instance, spend their entire year exploring , starting in the classroom and expanding to the neighborhood via field trips and interviews. In a culminating project, they build a detailed neighborhood out of materials like cardboard, wood and clay, and create original plays that explore the life of the city.

Fifth-graders spend the whole year 鈥 its geography, culture and history. The year culminates in a wide-ranging debate around Mao Zedong鈥檚 leadership and impact on Chinese society.

A classroom at Bank Street School for Children. The school offers a progressive, hands-on education that encourages intellectual curiosity, flexibility and 鈥済entleness,鈥 urging students to 鈥渓ive democratically鈥 inside and outside of school. (Courtesy of Bank Street College of Education)

During last year鈥檚 New York mayoral campaign, Mamdani鈥檚 connection to the school surfaced only occasionally, most notably in a of 2004. Otherwise the school served almost entirely as a stand-in for Mamdani鈥檚 and elitism: The New York Post dubbed it 鈥溾 and a lengthy piece on the mayor in Britain鈥檚 conservative devoted exactly nine words to Bank Street, calling it 鈥渁 pricey private school known for its progressive commitments.鈥澛

called it 鈥渁 private, ultra-progressive academy long favored by Manhattan’s liberal elite鈥 and noted both its high upper-school tuition 鈥 now north of $66,000 鈥 and the fact that students address teachers by their first names.  

More often, Mamdani鈥檚 championing of Democratic Socialism simply drove conservative Republicans and moderate Democrats crazy: After he won the city鈥檚 Democratic primary in June, President Donald Trump 鈥渁 100% Communist Lunatic.鈥 

In November, after Mamdani beat his nearest opponent, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, by more than 200,000 votes, Trump to the White House, where he changed his tune, saying, 鈥淲e have one thing in common: We want this city of ours that we love to do very well.鈥

Born in Uganda, Mamdani arrived in New York City when he was 7, the child of high-flying intellectuals: His mother, , is a well-known Indian-American filmmaker whose credits include Mississippi Masala, Monsoon Wedding and The Namesake. His father, , is an anthropology professor at Columbia University.

President Donald Trump and Mamdani during a meeting in the Oval Office in November. After meeting Mamdani, Trump told reporters, 鈥淲e have one thing in common: We want this city of ours that we love to do very well.鈥 (Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

As a student at the tiny school, Mamdani impressed just about everybody he met.

Classmate McAuliff recalled him as 鈥渆xtremely generous and, even at that age, extremely charismatic, which is an age where you don’t even really know what that is yet.鈥 A bit of that charisma likely rubbed off on McAuliff, who鈥檇 go on to work in the Biden administration and in November for a Virginia state house seat long held by Republicans.

John McAuliff

Brooke Nalle, Mamdani鈥檚 seventh-grade humanities teacher, recalled his 鈥渄imply, bright, sweet smile鈥 and remembered him as 鈥渋ncredibly adept at speaking to adults.鈥

鈥淗e is truly the most charismatic person I have ever met in my life,鈥 she said. 

Nalle still remembers the day in 2004 when Mamdani asked if she needed a personal email account. At the time, Google was offering Gmail, its new service, on an basis. Somehow, Mamdani had invitations to share. Two decades later, Nalle laughed at the memory: 鈥淚 am **@gmail.com because of Zohran, which is just bananas.鈥 

She and others recalled him not just as charismatic but generous with his time and attention, especially with younger classmates. 

鈥淵ou can always tell a kid is a good kid, a good egg, when they are nice to the younger children,鈥 said Nalle. 鈥淭he fifth-graders loved him, and he was really sweet to them.鈥

She noted that Bank Street, for years located in a six-story highrise off Broadway, in Manhattan鈥檚 Morningside Heights neighborhood, at the time required students to eat lunch in their classrooms. Most days teachers ate with them, and most days Mamdani brought 鈥渢his delicious snack鈥 in his lunch known as a kathi roll: One for him, another for her.

Striving to 鈥榣ive democratically鈥

Mamdani鈥檚 state legislative and transition offices did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Several who knew him in this period say the school played a key part in his personal and political development 鈥 not to mention his adventurous spirit, his ease with being in public and his ability to work both sides of an issue.

Founded in 1916 by philosopher and educator , a peer of education pioneer , Bank Street College of Education was among the first to champion child-centered learning as an alternative to the memorization-heavy rote learning in vogue at the time. 

Originally called the , it brought together educators, social workers and psychologists to study how children actually learn 鈥 rare for its time. 

That led to several overlapping missions, with Bank Street over the years training thousands of educators even as it turned to its School for Children as an in-house research lab for new ideas.

Bank Street College of Education, which runs the School for Children, was founded in 1918 as an institute for child-centered learning. (Courtesy of Bank Street College of Education)

The school鈥檚 influence has been widespread, affecting even our popular culture: In 1921, Mitchell made the case, in a , that children鈥檚 stories should be anchored in the real world and familiar objects, not in fairy stories or fantasy lands. She created Bank Street鈥檚 , a workshop that nurtured the careers of many children鈥檚 authors, including , whose 1947 picture book Goodnight Moon turned the common objects of a child鈥檚 bedroom into a perennial bestseller. 

Another Writers Lab alumnus, author , once that the fearsome creatures in 1963鈥檚 Where the Wild Things Are aren鈥檛 fantasy characters 鈥 they鈥檙e his unkempt, Old World Jewish relatives, who鈥檇 鈥減ick you up and hug you and kiss you. 鈥楢ggghh. Oh, we could eat you up.鈥欌 

Student artwork on display at Bank Street School for Children, founded in 1916 as an alternative to many schools鈥 memorization-heavy learning curricula. (Courtesy of Bank Street College of Education) 

The school鈥檚 longtime aims not only to encourage children鈥檚 intellectual curiosity, flexibility and 鈥済entleness,鈥 but urges them to 鈥渓ive democratically鈥 inside and outside of school.

Key to living democratically, said Shael Polakow-Suransky, Bank Street鈥檚 president, is the ability to understand different people’s perspectives.

A former senior deputy chancellor of New York City Schools, Polakow-Suransky said Mamdani鈥檚 experiences at Bank Street may well play a large role not just in how he campaigned but in how he governs: Education makes up 37% of the city’s budget, with 鈥渢remendous opportunities鈥 to shape the lives of children and families. 

Mamdani has already put forth an proposal that promises free care for every child from six weeks to five years old, offering child care workers wages that match those of public school teachers. 

But he also faces the daunting task of educating a huge influx of migrant students that over the past several years have both challenged the system and, in truth, kept its enrollment from .

Inaugurated on Jan. 1, Mamdani has moved quickly on education, naming a new schools chancellor a day before he was sworn in: currently oversees Manhattan鈥檚 District 3, which covers the Upper West Side, Morningside Heights and parts of Harlem. A former teacher in the Bronx with nearly 20 years of experience, Samuels also led school integration efforts and worked to scale back gifted programs.

Mamdani also reversed course on a campaign promise to end mayoral control of schools, saying he鈥檇 ask the state legislature for a continuation of the policy. New York鈥檚 mayor picks the chancellor and appoints most members of the , which oversees schools.

Mamdani on Wednesday promised to enact mayoral control differently: 鈥淚 have been skeptical of mayoral control in the past,鈥 , 鈥渆ven at times going as far as wanting to end the system entirely.鈥 But he acknowledged that New Yorkers 鈥渘eed to know where the buck stops: with me.鈥

Notably, said Polakow-Suransky, Mamdani may well rely on his alma mater for help with one key task: Keeping schools in the nation鈥檚 largest district staffed and running smoothly: Bank Street is now the city鈥檚 foremost principal training program, minting as many as 300 new principals a year 鈥 and 500 to 600 teachers. 

鈥楢 student who didn’t want to play the thing that was easy鈥

After Bank Street, the young Mamdani attended the city鈥檚 selective public . He鈥檇 later earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree at in Maine.

Asked whether it鈥檚 a bad look to have an alumnus of an exclusive private school become the new mayor, Polakow-Suransky shrugged. 鈥淎 lot of our leaders go to private schools,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t’s rare to have a Democratic Socialist leader, and so that’s why people are asking that question.鈥

Shael Polakow-Suransky

As New York City private schools go, he said, Bank Street is a bit different, not just in terms of philosophy and pedagogy. Students of color comprise a majority, and two-thirds now receive financial aid 鈥 far more than in Mamdani鈥檚 era. It鈥檚 also one of the most diverse private schools in the city, both racially and socioeconomically.

Much of the Bank Street curriculum still relies on immersing students in role-playing exercises, asking them to step into the shoes of people they might not always agree with.

Relying on simulations 鈥渃reates a lived experience in a classroom setting that feels very real,鈥 said Polakow-Suransky. 鈥淚t sticks with you. It teaches you a lot of the dilemmas and questions and skills that you need to be an active participant in a democracy.鈥

Longtime humanities teacher Ali McKersie, who trained at Bank Street and taught there for 26 years, said founder Mitchell believed creative, experiential learning that fosters ethical development can help strengthen democracy. 

As the eighth grade humanities teacher in 2005-2006, McKersie introduced Mamdani and his classmates to the foundational principles of democracy in ancient Greece, then 鈥渇ast-forwarded鈥 to American democracy with an extensive judicial branch simulation loosely based on the First Amendment principles of the 1969 case, which granted students the same free-speech rights in school as elsewhere. The case pitted junior and senior high school students against their school after they vowed to wear black armbands in silent protest against the Vietnam War. 

In an image from Zohran Mamdani鈥檚 Twitter account, he and his family enjoy pizza last June at a well-known Broadway pizzeria around the corner from Bank Street School. (Twitter screen grab)

Mamdani, she recalled, argued on the side of the school board, which wanted to limit expression to minimize disruption.

From there they undertook a 12-week congressional simulation, taking on the roles of actual legislators. Mamdani, the scion of Upper West Side cultural royalty, played  , the moderate Republican senator from Rhode Island. 

鈥淚 remember that being a really interesting choice,鈥 said McKersie. Mamdani 鈥渨as always a student who didn’t want to play the thing that was easy. He wanted to be challenged.鈥

More to the point, she said, he liked being a consensus-builder. 

McKersie recalled that the students that year in Room 420 鈥 yes, they got the joke about the number associated with 鈥 were 鈥渞eally an exceptional group of young people. They wanted to dig into tax policy! I just remember being surprised that they were really interested in the mechanisms of funding around bills.鈥

Ali McKersie

So in addition to debating the usual suspects 鈥 gun control, abortion, the environment 鈥 tax codes were on the table, she said. 鈥淭hey were asking really fundamental questions around equity, and what’s what’s equitable. What does justice look like at the level of minutiae, at the legislative level?鈥

The simulation that year became such a part of the students鈥 fiber that McKersie would sometimes have to throw them out of the classroom at the end of class just to end debates. They鈥檇 carry it to lunch and would often still be discussing issues after school. 

One morning, she showed up to class expecting students to spend the day writing a bill, only to be presented with the finished version. They鈥檇 stayed up late, they said, hammering out the details over the phone. 

In that seminal 2004 mock election, classmate McCauliff recalled, the trio 鈥済ot very granular鈥 about the vote counting. Each class had only 40 or 45 people, so they were 鈥渁ble to figure out who Zohran needed to talk to, figure out what each person wanted to hear about.鈥 

In the end, the COWs won the independent primary and took on the establishment. The granular approach apparently worked: Mamdani and Smith won by a single vote.

For Smith, it was a confirmation, for all of the striving seventh-graders, 鈥渢hat you can just go for it and try it and beat down the door. And sometimes it works.鈥

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