New York, NY
Borough of Manhattan Community College Early Childhood Center
| Review this preschool |
neighborhood: Tribeca · Telephone: (212) 220-8252 · Website: www.bmcc.cuny.edu
Contact Info
Borough of Manhattan Community College Early Childhood Center
199 Chambers Street, N-310
New York, NY
10007
www.bmcc.cuny.edu
Tel:
(212) 220-8252
Fax:
(212) 748-7462
Director:
Claudette Jordan, Asst. Administrative Director
cjordan@bmcc.cuny.edu
Source:
General Approach to Learning
| Play-based with some structure |
Source:
School Philosophy and Mission
Early Childhood Center Mission Statement The mission of the Early Childhood Center is to provide student parents with the quality child care they need to enroll, study and graduate from Borough of ...
(read more)
source:
Typical Day-In-The-Life At This School
8-10:30 Morning snack available
8-9:40 Work Time. Children select from: Math center, Sand/water center, Science center, Dress up center, Block center Library, Writi...
(read more)
source:
Ages, Class Size, days & Tuition
| Ages | From
2 years
to 6 years 11 months |
| Days: | 5 day(s) a week 7:45 am- 5 pm |
source:
Key Statistics
| Extended day | Yes |
| Age cutoff for enrollment | 2 years |
Source:
Application Information
| Applications accepted | If child is age eligible |
| Wait list | Yes |
| Deadline for applications | Rolling |
| Application Information | Free |
| Acceptance criteria: | First-come basis based on non-selective, first-come- first served basis. |
source:
Advertisement
A Season of Rituals
Darkest December is upon us, and we are all preparing, in our different ways, to light it up with rituals. Christmas, Hanukkah, and New Year's. Parties, tree lightings, and holiday cards. Visits with family. Feasts, gifts, and candles.
Montessori? Waldorf? Play-based?
What school type is right for your child? Is one model better than another? What does the research say?
View an example from the Savvy Source guide to learn more.
Today's “Preschool’s Out” Activity
Get large plastic buckets (or sand buckets if you have lots of really little toys )in a variety of solid colors (red, blue, yellow, green, pink). Ask your child to clean up his/her toys by putting the toys in the bucket corresponding to the color bucket. Great for teaching personal responsibility, color identification, and sorting.
| Comment (1) |
This Week's Poll
Off the Beaten Path
Plan fun activities to do in:
Advertisement



