Past decades have seen media coverage of Riverdale's racist rhetoric in the 1960s and heavy ideological slant around 2020. In 2018, Riverdale was in the news for cancelling an
Israel-Palestine seminar, purportedly forcing out a teacher who had taught at the school for over 25 years, even though parents stated that he welcomed debate. In a
Huffington Post article, titled "How An Elite New York City Prep School Created A Safe Space For Angry Zionists," board members
Tal Keinan, Dan Rosen, Seth Berger, and
David Westin were reported to have used their status as donors and board members to organize meetings with the Headmaster and pressure him to fire another teacher. The article notes, "By HuffPost’s calculations, the parents who received the May 30 email had donated upward of $500,000 to Riverdale in the 2016–17 fiscal year alone. (The 2017–18 report has not yet been released.) Because the school lists only funding ranges for donations in its annual report, it is possible the total is far greater. Specifically, an individual or couple is listed as having given anywhere between $10,000 and $24,999, $25,000 to $49,999, over $50,000 and so on — meaning one year’s worth of their donations could easily have surpassed seven figures." Riverdale also attracted attention in 2021, for allegedly teaching students to monitor each other in order to determine if they were practicing "allyship" sufficiently, which meant that those perceived as non-compliant would be reported to school administrators. The practice, introduced as a replacement for the
Pledge of Allegiance, caused Bion Bartning to withdraw his children from the school, protesting "a kind of religion taking hold in American education that forces people into categories according to their race." Groups of parents had been protesting the school's practice of "leftist indoctrination" in 2019. ==Campuses==