At a Glance
A small early childhood center where teachers report strong trust and instruction quality, serving families in a lower-income Bronx neighborhood with significant safety and health challenges
Families seeking free, universal pre-K for their three or four-year-old children who live in or near Claremont Village and are comfortable navigating an urban neighborhood with safety challenges. Parents who prioritize a small, intimate early learning environment with reportedly strong teacher leadership may find this fits well — but those who want comprehensive data on school performance or who need a school that continues past pre-K should look elsewhere.
- Universal 3K and PreK access — no lottery or selective admissions
- Teachers report 100% instruction quality and full trust in leadership
- Small, intimate early childhood setting focused exclusively on 3K-PreK
- Strong teacher collegiality — staff report high trust with each other
- Very small staff — only six teachers responded to surveys, so the 100% scores may not represent all educators
- No academic performance data available because students are below testing age
- No attendance or discipline data provided — parents can't review trends
- Neighborhood safety ranks in the 11th percentile — significant safety concerns in the surrounding area
- High environmental health risks: elevated lead rates and asthma emergencies
- Only serves 3K and PreK — families must find a new school for kindergarten
- Households with children are rare in this neighborhood (10%), which may limit community connections with other families
Based on 2024-2025 data
School SummaryDistrict
As a standalone 3K/PreK center, Ready Set Learn can't be directly compared to elementary or middle schools. It's part of the city's universal pre-K expansion, serving the youngest learners in District 8 or nearby. The perfect teacher survey scores are unusual and noteworthy, but come from such a tiny sample that they should be interpreted cautiously. The school's value lies in providing early childhood access in a neighborhood where family resources are limited.
As an early childhood center serving 3K and PreK students, this school does not participate in state ELA or Math assessments. There are no proficiency scores to report because the students are below grade 3. The academic program focuses on early learning foundational skills appropriate for three and four-year-olds.
The six teachers who responded to the 2025 survey gave their school perfect marks across the board: 100% reported high quality instruction, full trust in the principal, and strong collegial trust among staff. This is a remarkable result, though the small response size (six teachers) means it represents a very narrow slice of the school community. There's no attendance data reported because early childhood programs track attendance differently, and no discipline data available. The vibe from the survey suggests a tight-knit, supportive staff environment where educators feel valued and effective.
The neighborhood around Claremont Village has a very low percentage of households with children — just 10% — making this an unusual pocket of the Bronx where families are the minority. The community is predominantly renter-occupied (97.3% non-owner), with only 11.4% of adults holding a bachelor's degree or higher. This contrasts with the broader city pattern and suggests the families who do live here may face barriers that keep other families away. The school serves a specific early childhood population, drawing parents who are actively seeking pre-K slots for their three and four-year-olds.
This school sits in a part of the Bronx where safety is a significant concern — the neighborhood scores in the 11th percentile for safety, with high crime density and elevated rates of housing quality violations. The area does have solid transit access (75th percentile), making it reachable by bus and subway. Environmental health is a worry: 15.2% of children have elevated blood lead levels and the asthma emergency department visit rate is notably high at 75.5 per 1,000. Parks and family resources exist in the broader Bronx, though the immediate area's family density is moderate at the 58th percentile. Parents should know they're enrolling their children in a neighborhood that presents real challenges — but also one where community resources and transit connections provide pathways out.
The neighborhood has decent walkability and strong transit access, so families can often reach the school without a car. However, parents should factor in the safety considerations of walking in an area with high crime density and pedestrian collision rates.
Survey Results
NYC School Survey (2025)
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is 3467 Ready Set Learn a good school?
- Published quality ratings aren't available for 3467 Ready Set Learn yet on Motley. It's a public school serving grades 3-K to Pre-K in Claremont Village-Claremont (East).
- What grades does 3467 Ready Set Learn serve?
- 3467 Ready Set Learn serves grades 3-K to Pre-K.
- How do students get into 3467 Ready Set Learn?
- 3467 Ready Set Learn admits through the NYC 3-K and Pre-K application.
- Is 3467 Ready Set Learn public, charter, or private?
- 3467 Ready Set Learn is a public school.
- What neighborhood is 3467 Ready Set Learn in?
- 3467 Ready Set Learn is in Claremont Village-Claremont (East), Bronx.
Get the complete picture
Motley pulls together data from across New York City so you don’t have to. One free account, every school.
No credit card required
Get all this when you sign in
Survey data, program listings, admissions stats, and the full editorial profile — free, no credit card.
Full School Profile
Skip the tour guessing game. Get the standout features, honest trade-offs, and whether your kid will actually thrive here — before you visit.
Survey Results
See what 2,600+ schools’ own families and teachers really think — trust, safety, instruction quality — so you walk in with the truth, not the brochure.
Programs & Activities
Stop Googling program lists. AP courses, STEM labs, dual-language tracks, sports teams, arts — all categorized so you can compare schools in minutes.
Admissions Demand
Know your odds before you apply. Apps-per-seat ratios, offer rates, and fill data — so you don’t waste your top choice on a long shot.
Economic Need & Special Populations
Find out if the support your child needs is actually there — IEP enrollment, economic need index, and the demographics no other site surfaces.
Discipline
One bad year doesn’t tell you much. Three years of state-verified suspension data shows whether things are getting better or worse.