New York Post

BETTER OFF RED

Soviet math classes are new must-have for rich kids with Ivy League ambitions

- By JEANETTE SETTEMBRE

At the tender age of 7, while most kids were learning to ride bikes and play video games, Natalia Latuskiewc­z was pondering early principles of multiplica­tion and algebra two hours per week in her Russian math class.

“I thought my daughter could do more than what she was offered [in school],” her mother, Anna Latuskiewc­z, told The Post. The 44-year-old Stanford alum, who works as a data scientist and investor, enrolled Natalia in the Russian School of Mathematic­s seven years ago, paying $3,000 for the tutoring — on top of $30,000 annually for tuition at an allgirls private elementary.

“If she wants to be a doctor, an engineer — math will never hurt,” said the mom of four who lives in Medina, Wash. “The sky is the limit.”

Russian math classes are the latest must-have for well-to-do parents looking to give their tots any and every advantage. The lessons rely on a method that was developed in the Soviet Union during the Cold War and prioritize reasoning, critical thinking and abstract principles over brute memorizati­on. Companies offering the instructio­n are seeing a boom in enrollment as students look for new ways to infiltrate the Ivy League.

Growing demand

“Money is the fix for anything,” a 40-year-old Manhattan mom recently told the Cut of hiring a Russian math tutor — along with a kindergart­en admissions consultant — for her preschoole­r. Boston’s Russian School of Mathematic­s was founded more than 25 years ago by immigrants from Belarus and Ukraine and it now boasts more than 70 locations across the US. Its first Manhattan location opened in 2017 on the Upper East Side. There are now three uptown outposts along with outlets in Battery Park, Brooklyn and Scarsdale. “Growth has been steady,” the school’s director of outreach, Masha Gershman, told The Post. Kids can enroll as young as 5. “Earlier is always better, as with any other type of developmen­t,” Gershman said. “Math is a tool to shape how a child thinks.”

The school is quick to note that it has no current ties to Moscow.

“We stand unequivoca­lly with the Ukrainian people against Putin,” a statement on it website reads. “We named our school to reflect the historic tradition of Russian mathematic­s that we all share. This is a tradition that predates Russia’s current government and will exist long after it.”

Another company, Russian Math Tutors, is considerin­g changing its name due to the ongoing war. But founder Alexander Kolchinsky, who immigrated to the US from the Soviet Union as a child, truly believes the Russian method is superior.

“In American schools, they start with the easy problems and work up to the hard problems. We start with the hard problems in the beginning of the lesson,” said Kolchinsky, a former Silicon Valley software developer who started his online tutoring platform in 2020. “Then, they brainstorm.”

His program introduces algebraic concepts to his third-gradelevel pupils. Most American schools don’t teach such ideas until students hit ninth grade.

Some New York City teachers, however, are critical of the tutoring.

“The kids [in Russian math] learn how to do the math in their head, and they’re not showing the actual work, so they make careless mistakes. They make it harder for the other kids because they start to ask them these math questions that are not ageappropr­iate and the other kids feel bad about themselves,” a teacher who works at an Upper West Side private school told The Post anonymousl­y. On top of this, she added, “the parents argue with teachers that their kids can do more advanced work.”

Annoying to teachers

Latuskiewc­z has no issues with her kids doing schoolwork at a more advanced level than their peers. After seeing Natalia’s success, she signed up her younger son, Matthew, when he was 6. He complained about doing math classes at 9 a.m. on Saturdays when his friends were playing sports, but it paid off. Matthew, now 10, was able to skip the third grade.

“I want them to understand that life is not about fun and what’s easy,” she said.

Natalia, now 14, is already gearing up to take the SATs, while her extracurri­culars include swimming competitiv­ely and playing the piano. Getting into a top-tier college is key, her mother said.

“We definitely would like to try for something a bit higher than a state school.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States