At a Glance
A high-trust early childhood center in a working-class Brooklyn neighborhood where teachers are fully invested
Families in East New York and surrounding Brooklyn neighborhoods seeking a high-quality, universally-accessible Pre-K experience where teachers are demonstrably committed. This works well for parents who prioritize a trusting, collaborative school environment and who are comfortable navigating a neighborhood with real safety and environmental considerations. Families seeking a K-12 school should look elsewhere, as this serves only 3K and Pre-K.
- 100% of teachers report high instructional quality — an exceptional signal in early childhood
- 96% teacher-principal trust indicates strong, collaborative leadership
- 95% collegial trust among staff suggests a united, supportive team environment
- Universal Pre-K access removes admissions barriers for neighborhood families
- Teacher survey sample is very small (7 responses), so results should be interpreted with caution
- No parent survey data is available, so the family voice is not represented
- Neighborhood safety scores are low — families should factor this into their daily routine planning
- Environmental health indicators (lead, asthma rates) are elevated compared to city averages
- No K-12 academics to evaluate — this is purely an early childhood center
Based on 2025 data
School SummaryDistrict
District context is not available for this early childhood center, as it does not serve grades that participate in state testing. Compared to other Pre-K programs in Brooklyn, the standout is the teacher satisfaction data — rare to see 100% instruction quality ratings, which suggests the program is running well despite neighborhood challenges.
As an early childhood center serving 3-year-olds through Pre-K, this school does not participate in state standardized testing. Instruction quality is measured through teacher surveys, where 100% of respondents rated instruction as high quality — a remarkable signal when teachers are the ones closest to the classroom reality.
The teacher survey results are striking: 100% report high instructional quality, 96% trust the principal, and 95% report strong collegial trust among staff. This suggests a healthy, collaborative workplace where adults are aligned on mission. However, parent survey data is not provided, so the family experience is less clear. Attendance data is not available, which is typical for early childhood programs where chronic absenteeism metrics differ from K-12. The day-to-day feel appears to be one where teachers are committed and the building runs on genuine teamwork.
East New York (North) is a predominantly working-class neighborhood with a poverty rate of 25.1% and median household income of $57,841. Only 15.7% of residents have a bachelor's degree or higher, and just 30% of households own their homes — meaning most families are renting. The area has a young, family-dense character (67.82 percentile for family density), though only 17.2% of households have children under 18. This is a neighborhood of modest means where families are making it work, and the early childhood center sits squarely in that context.
East New York (North) presents a mixed picture for families. The safety score of 24.9 is low — crime density and collision rates are elevated, and the lead elevated rate of 16.3% and asthma emergency department rate of 104.4 per 100,000 suggest environmental health concerns. Transit access is strong (70.88 score), making commutes manageable. Education orientation is low (30.27), meaning this isn't a neighborhood where academic pressure is the dominant culture. What the neighborhood does offer is affordability relative to the rest of the city (median home value $616,916) and a tight-knit community feel.
The area is walkable for local families, and the strong transit score means parents without cars can commute reasonably well. Families coming from further afield will find the area accessible by bus and train.
Survey Results
NYC School Survey (2025)
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Blake & Milford DCC a good school?
- Published quality ratings aren't available for Blake & Milford DCC yet on Motley. It's a public school serving grades 3-K to Pre-K in East New York (North).
- What grades does Blake & Milford DCC serve?
- Blake & Milford DCC serves grades 3-K to Pre-K.
- How do students get into Blake & Milford DCC?
- Blake & Milford DCC admits through the NYC 3-K and Pre-K application.
- Is Blake & Milford DCC public, charter, or private?
- Blake & Milford DCC is a public school.
- What neighborhood is Blake & Milford DCC in?
- Blake & Milford DCC is in East New York (North), Brooklyn.
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.