COACHING OUR CHILDREN TO SUCCESS
Manhattan Edge Education
44 Wall Street
4th Floor
New York, NY 10005
ph: 917-687-9389
admin
We Follow our motivational Strategy:
Play Prep administered by the NYS certified gifted and talented teacher or OLSAT teacher starts at $165/session when ordered for 12 or more sessions.
We offer an assessment with a teacher that has been exposed to the testing to uncover weaknesses. This will include a practice test administered in a test-like setting. You will then receive a detailed evaluation itemizing each skill for the particular exam your child will be attempting with a determination of how your child compares to the peer/age group.This includes a 40 part questionnaire that details the physical, social, emotional and cognitive skills a child attending kindergarten should master. This service starts at $200. A child psychologist can be utilized for this part of the evaluation.
Are you curious to know if your child will be able to sit through the testing? Want to be prepared for surprises? Do you want to make the testing experience a positive one for your child?
Email us at info@tutorsnewyork.com to have your child meet with one of our teachers for a simulated test. We will duplicate the rigors of the test but end it on a positive fun note so your child will expect the same on testing day.
testing fee is $130 for a weekend time
ERB / Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI) is an intelligence test designed for children ages 2 years 6 months to 7 years 3 months. The current revision is called the WPPSI–III. Harcourt claims it provides subtest and composite scores that represent intellectual functioning in verbal and performance cognitive domains, as well as providing a composite score that represents a child’s general intellectual ability (i.e., Full Scale IQ).
Some studies show that intelligence tests such as the WPPSI-III, especially for pre-K level, are unreliable and their results vary wildly with various factors such as retesting, practice (familiarization), test administrator, time and place. There are claims that some commercially available material improve results simply by eliminating negative factors through familiarization which in turn puts children at a comfortable frame of mind.
There are 14 segments
1. Block Design – child uses one- or two-color blocks to re-create a design within a specified time limit.
2. Matrix Reasoning – child looks at an incomplete matrix and selects the missing portion from 4 or 5 response options.
3. Information (checks enrichment base) – child responds to a question by choosing a picture from four response options or the child answers questions that address a broad range of general knowledge topics.
4. Vocabulary – child names pictures or gives definitions for words that the examiner reads aloud from the stimulus book.
5. Picture Concepts – child is presented with two or three rows of pictures and chooses one picture from each row to form a group with a common characteristic.
6. Symbol Search – child scans a search group and indicates whether a target symbol matches any of the symbols in the search group.
7. Word Reasoning – child identifies the common concept being described in a series of increasingly specific clues.
8. Coding – child copies symbols paired with simple geometric shapes. Using a key, the child draws each symbol in its corresponding shape.
9. Comprehension (checks enrichment base) – child answers questions based on his or her understanding of general principles and social situations.
10. Picture Completion – child views a picture and then points to or names the missing part.
11. Similarities – child is read an incomplete sentence containing two concepts that share a common characteristic. The child is asked to complete the sentence by providing a response that reflects the shared characteristic.
12. Receptive Vocabulary – child looks at a group of pictures and points to the one the examiner names aloud.
13. Object Assembly – child is presented with the pieces of a puzzle in a standard arrangement and fits the pieces together to form a meaningful whole within 90 seconds.
14. Picture Naming – child names pictures from the stimulus book.
Otis-Lennon School Ability Test (OLSAT), published by Pearson Education, Inc., is a test of abstract thinking and reasoning ability of children pre-K to 18. The Otis-Lennon is a group-administered (except preschool), multiple choice exam, which measures verbal, quantitative, and spatial reasoning ability. It is organized into five main sections of verbal comprehension, verbal reasoning, pictorial reasoning, figural reasoning, and quantitative reasoning.The test yields verbal and nonverbal scores, from which a total score is derived, called a School Ability Index (SAI). The SAI is a normalized standard score with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 16. Scoring is measured against peers in age groups of 3-month bands. For example, children born October 4 through December 4 are compared with each other and children born January 4 through March 4 with each other and so on. With the exception of pre-K, the test is administered in groups.
Bracken School Readiness Assessment (BSRA) is a cognitive test designed for children, pre-K through second grade. It assesses six basic skills:
Raw scores can be converted to percentile rank scores and standard scores. The BSRA can be used with children as young as 2.6 years of age.
Since the inception of the Stanford-Binet, it has been revised several times. Currently, the test is in its fifth edition, which is called the Stanford-Binet 5. Low variation on individuals tested more than once indicates the test has high reliability, although its validity is debated. The test has been revised to analyze an individual’s responses in four content areas: verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, abstract/visual reasoning, and short term memory. A general composite score is obtained. The test is scored by comparing how the test taker performs compared with other people of the same age. The five factors assessed in the test are: Fluid Reasoning, Knowledge, Quantitative Reasoning, Visual-Spatial Processing, and Working Memory. Each factor is assessed in two separate domains, verbal and nonverbal, in order to accurately assess individuals with deafness, limited English, or communication disorders. Examples of test items include verbal analogies to test Verbal Fluid Reasoning and picture absurdities (last year’s included a picture of a man sawing a limb that he is sitting on, off a tree) to test Nonverbal Knowledge. The test makers state that the Stanford-Binet 5 accurately assesses low-functioning, normal intelligence, and high-functioning individuals.

Call or email us today, if you have questions or to reserve your place in our program.
FAQs
Why do you call it "Play Prep"?
Unlike the other groups trying to copy our success, we use game play to keep it interesting and stay away from stressful sessions that will work against testing success - we are the original and the only one with this format.
Why Should I Prep?
You want your child to be as comfortable as possible when meeting with a stranger to answer the questions on these tests. You also want them to understand what is being asked on each of the different sections of the test. We focus on game playing with work in between games to lengthen the attention span.
Why Use Manhattan Edge?
What sets us apart? We are part of the gifted and talented community and have been for 8 years - since 2001. That is how long we have really been in this game. Our competition is just starting. We constantly strive to be the best and know from research of our competitors that no one has our experience in this type of testing. They do not have children in the G&T programs like we do nor do they have the network of teachers at the G&T schools. I saw these tests 8 years ago (ERB, SB5) and immediately started gathering materials to mimic it and help familiarize my children with it. Through job interviews with the people who give these tests, I am constantly updated on the parts that children are having difficulty with.
Can I buy Materials and do it myself?
You could, but research shows a methodical and disciplined approach to coaching children is best. One that builds on each particular skill at the right time is important for metacognition; when and where to use particular strategies for learning or for problem solving. We believe you, as a parent, are too attached to the outcome to present whatever materials you can find in a fun and interesting format. Your child will be much more open when presented with a challenge from a stranger than a parent. Frustration evolves easily in this scenario.
"Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great."
- Mark Twain
Play Prep works on the following:
Manhattan Edge Education
44 Wall Street
4th Floor
New York, NY 10005
ph: 917-687-9389
admin