Success Academy Shutters Pre-K Programs Over Disputed Contract

JuditPolgarSA2
Several up and coming chess master Brooklyn students from Success Academy schools participated in the program.

After nearly a year of battling over a contract with the de Blasio Administartion, Success Academy (SA) announced today that the network must cancel its pre-k program for the 2016-17 school year.

Eva Moskowitz
Eva Moskowitz

The City mandates all all entities hosting pre-k schools to sign the contract, but SA Founder & CEO Eva Moskowitz refused, saying it exerted too much control over her curriculum, daily schedule and field trips.

Moskowitz argued that the State University of New York is the proper oversight authority over charter schools her network. But State Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia ruled for the city, saying pre-K is a state-funded grant program, rather than part of the K-12 levels overseen by SUNY.

Moskowitz appealed the matter to the state Supreme Court earlier this year, but acknowledged the court’s decision would come too late to open doors in August, and families of admitted children must scramble to find alternatives.

“It is unbelievably sad to tell parents and teachers that the courts won’t rescue our pre-k program from the mayor’s war on Success in time to open next year,” said Success Academy founder and CEO Eva Moskowitz.

The Department of Education argued that every other one of the 277 organizations that applied to host pre-k—including every other charter—signed the same basic contract.

The terms of the DOE’s proposed contract all stem directly from the baseline program quality requirements set for participating pre-k providers by statute, regulation, and the SED.

“For the first time, every child in New York City has access to free, full-day, high quality pre-K programs across district, charter, parochial and early education centers,” said DOE Spokesperson Devora Kaye.

“The State upheld our important standards to ensure all programs are high quality, and we look forward to welcoming more charter schools and organizations across every neighborhood to Pre-K for All to provide families with this critical year of academic learning,” she added.

 

SA currently runs pre-k at three schools in Harlem, Williamsburg and Cobble Hill, and had planned to expand the program to two additional locations next year. About 3,000 children were entered into the admissions lottery.

“I’ll probably have to do a lot of work with my son at home — over the summer and at night — to ensure he doesn’t already have an educational deficit at the early age of 3,” said Jacqueline Banegas-Abreu, whose son was slated to attend pre-k at Success Academy Cobble Hill next year.