A New York parent is fighting back against Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio’s plan to phase out the Gifted and Talented program at public elementary schools in the city. 

"It's just nonsense," FAIR, NYC Chapter Co-Chair Yiatin Chu told "America Reports" Tuesday.

"The New York City gifted and talented program needs improvement and certainly needs to be expanded into all neighborhoods, and many neighborhoods don't even have one of these programs. But to take it away, especially for families that are depending on the opportunity this year is just really abrupt and destructive."

NYC'S DE BLASIO SENT HIS CHILDREN TO 'GIFTED AND TALENTED' SCHOOL

Chu comments come as critics of the Gifted and Talented program called it racist because White and Asian students made up the majority of enrollees. 

"We are saying we’re going to train teachers and prepare schools to actually reach you as a child and bring out your gifts and abilities that would have been ignored if you were not accepted into one of those very small, very exclusive, Gifted and Talented programs previously," de Blasio said Friday on WNYC.

Current students in the program will be able to stay in accelerated-learning classes until completion. But new students in the program will be completely eliminated by fall 2022, ending the current testing for 4-year-old city kids.

"It is a fool's errand to think that…training teachers to be able to differentiate for the highest level of learners in classrooms of 25-32 is really going to meet and support these accelerate learners’ needs," Chu added.

The Gifted and Talented program is being replaced by Brilliant NYC, a program offering students aged 8 and up chances for accelerated learning — while staying in their regular classrooms with other pupils.

Meanwhile, New York Democratic Assemblyman Ron Kim responded to de Blasio’s purging of the program. 

New York's Mayor Bill de Blasio makes declarations at a mass vaccination site at Yankee Stadium amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the Bronx borough of New York City, New York, U.S., February 5, 2021. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri

New York's Mayor Bill de Blasio makes declarations at a mass vaccination site at Yankee Stadium amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the Bronx borough of New York City, New York, U.S., February 5, 2021. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri (REUTERS/Carlo Allegri)

"These are not privileged, wealthy parents. These are working parents who want to challenge their kids," Kim told New York Post. "How is putting kids out of gifted and talented programs going to solve racial segregation? Punishing kids who want to excel is wrong."

Both of de Blasio’s children, now in their mid-20s, attended M.S. 51 in Brooklyn’s wealthy Park Slope neighborhood. The school bills itself as a "gifted and talented" middle school.

Furthermore, Democratic New York City mayoral nominee Eric Adams criticized de Blasio’s decision to scrap the Gifted and Talented program and mentioned he would "reserve my right" to reverse the decision. 

NYC’S GIFTED AND TALENTED PROGRAM TO BE ELIMINATED, DE BLASIO SAYS

"I’m going to reserve my right, if I’m fortunate to be mayor, to determine how we handle Gifted and Talented, to deal with the segregation in our schools … and ensure that we create a system where every child reaches his or her full potential," he said on Fox 5’s "Good Day New York" Tuesday. 

Chu continued to say her group PLACE NYC, which advocates for high quality education in New York City public schools, is attempting to advocate for the expansion of Gifted and Talented programs, not cancel them. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

"It's really a sad day that New York City's public school education is being destroyed by New York City's mayor on his way out the door," Chu concluded.

Fox News' Jessica Chasmar and New York Post contributed to this report.