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    Manhattan mom sues $19K/yr. preschool for damaging 4-year-old daughter's Ivy League chances

    No comment seems possible. We roll our eyes at this mom, but when you think about it, isn't this "Get 'em ready for the Ivy League" exactly the message these pricey pre-schools are promoting?

    Here's how Daily News readers answered a poll:

    Question: Poisoned Ivy?

    What do you think of Manhattan mom's lawsuit against a $19,000 a year preschool for failing to prepare her 4-year-old daughter properly for an elite private school and ultimately an Ivy League college?

  • It's legit! For $19K the school needs to give these kids a shot at elite schools. 8%


  • It's a joke! The kid's four and shouldn't be put under so much pressure! 39%


  • Nobody should be spending college tuition prices on a preschool in the first place. 53%


  • By Jose Martinez

    A Manhattan mom is suing a $19,000-a-year preschool, claiming it jeopardized her daughter's chances of getting into an elite private school because she had to slum with younger kids.

    Court papers filed by Nicole Imprescia suggest the York Avenue Preschool may have doomed 4-year-old Lucia's chances of getting into an Ivy League college.

    "At age four, [York Avenue Preschool] was still teaching [Imprescia's] daughter about shapes and colors - a two year old's learning environment," the suit says.

    "Like many parents living in Manhattan, [Imprescia] places a priority on her child's preschool education," the papers add.

    The suit quotes from an article that identifies elite preschools as the first step for getting children into the best schools "and on to the Ivy League."

    An impressive sales pitch from the York Ave. school in the fall of 2009 convinced Imprescia to enroll Lucia -- and pay $19,000 up front.

    The goal, the suit says, was to prepare Lucia for the ERB standardized test -- which the top private elementary schools use in making admission decisions.

    "[York Avenue Preschool] boasted to [Imprescia] that it had a high success rate in getting its students into high caliber schools, both public and private," the suit says.

    Those claims are "a complete fraud," the mom charges, going on to blast the York Avenue's educational environment and lack of age-specific classrooms.

    "Indeed, the school proved not to be a school at all, but just one big playroom," the suit says.

    The school's owner, Michael Branciforte, did not return a call seeking comment.

    On its website, York Avenue Preschool touts its music and physical education programs, weekly library trips and French classes for four-year-olds.

    "Our goal is to reach each child and work with them towards their 'next steps,'" the site says.

    Imprescia is seeking a $19,000 tuition refund and wants to launch a class-action case on behalf of similarly wronged toddlers.

    Imprescia and her lawyer declined comment.

    — Jose Martinez
    New York Daily News
    2011-03-14
    http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/03/14/2011-03-14_manhattan_mom_sues_19kyr_preschool_for_damaging_4yearold_daughters_ivy_league_ch.html


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