Motley
Citywide / specialized
PublicPre-K Universal

Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center

159 Broadway

At a Glance

A public early childhood center in a stable, homeownership-heavy Staten Island neighborhood where the focus is entirely on our youngest learners

Best suited for

Families with toddlers who want a dedicated early childhood setting in a stable, residential Staten Island neighborhood and are comfortable with the commute; parents who value the suburban feel of this section of the city and plan to navigate separate kindergarten placement later.

What stands out
  • Serves only 3K and Pre-K students — this is an early childhood specialty, not a K-5 school with a pre-K program
  • Publicly governed but operated through Children's Aid Society, bringing a community organization approach to early education
  • Located in one of Staten Island's most stable neighborhoods with high homeownership and low poverty
  • Universal pre-K means any NYC family in the zone can apply
Things to consider
  • No academics data available because students are too young for standardized tests — evaluate based on classroom visit and teacher interaction instead
  • Only three teacher survey responses in 2025 — the climate data may not be statistically representative
  • This school only goes through Pre-K — families need a plan for where their child will attend kindergarten
  • The neighborhood skews residential and less transit-connected than most of the city — consider commute logistics

Based on 2025 data

School SummaryDistrict

This early learning center sits in a Staten Island district characterized by strong family stability and homeownership. It's a different profile from the city's more urban, transit-heavy neighborhoods — think suburban infrastructure with NYC public schools. Among early childhood options in the borough, this center benefits from the neighborhood's low poverty rate and engaged family base, though direct comparative performance data for 3K/Pre-K programs is limited.

AcademicsSteady

As an early learning center, this school doesn't operate on the same academic metrics as K-5 schools. There's no state test data because the students are in 3K and Pre-K, where the work is building foundational skills through play, socialization, and early literacy exposure rather than proficiency benchmarks.

Culturestrong

The 2025 teacher survey had only 3 responses, so the data should be interpreted with significant caution given the extremely small sample. For what it's worth, those responses suggest positive trends in safety and instruction, but parent survey data would give a fuller picture of family experience. Discipline in early childhood settings focuses on social-emotional development rather than punitive measures, which is age-appropriate but can feel different than parents of older children might expect.

Community

This is an early childhood center in a neighborhood where families with children make up about 24% of households — modest for a family-oriented area but reflective of an older population. The community is predominantly homeowners with higher median home values than the city average, suggesting families with resources. The BA+ education rate of 42% is moderate for Staten Island, which generally skews lower on advanced degrees than Manhattan or parts of Brooklyn.

NeighborhoodWest New Brighton-Silver Lake-Grymes Hill

West New Brighton-Silver Lake-Grymes Hill is a Staten Island neighborhood with strong stability scores and high homeownership — it's the kind of place where families settle long-term. The area has above-average safety scores for the city and strong health environment indicators. Transit access is moderate by NYC standards (about average), which means most families likely drive or walk. There's a suburban feel despite being in the city, with single-family homes and quiet streets.

This is Staten Island, where walking to school is common for those who live close but less typical for families further out. Most students likely arrive by car, given the neighborhood's suburban character and below-average transit scores. The area is drivable but expect traffic on major routes.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center a good school?
Published quality ratings aren't available for Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center yet on Motley. It's a public school serving grades 3-K to Pre-K in West New Brighton-Silver Lake-Grymes Hill.
What grades does Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center serve?
Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center serves grades 3-K to Pre-K.
How do students get into Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center?
Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center admits through the NYC 3-K and Pre-K application.
Is Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center public, charter, or private?
Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center is a public school.
What neighborhood is Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center in?
Children's Aid Society Richmond Early Learning Center is in West New Brighton-Silver Lake-Grymes Hill, Staten Island.
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