You can look at the transcript for the PCSB meeting September 16, 2024. It's an interesting read. Weirdly, BASIS' application included a growth plan that they weren't actually willing to implement. But that is what was approved. They could try again to get some other growth plan approved, of course. If they do find a building, that location would also need to be approved by the PCSB. |
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And another Basis booster thread re-started…….
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Actually, the expansion is K-4. PCSB approved the expansion but Basis still has to figure out if they will agree to staggered expansion as approved. They also need to get a building. So, everything seems on hold for now. |
Another Basis whiner posts. |
But the current system does allow for teens who are "locked out of" or rather, choose not to, go to BASIS. There are lots of application high schools in DC -- Walls, Banneker, Duke Ellington, McKinley Tech, Phelps Engineering, etc. Many students take advantage of these schools and receive an excellent education that prepares them for the life they will actually lead. |
I don't know what PP means by "life they will actually lead" but do agree that these high schools provide a great education and that many students do apply and go to them. |
| I'd add CHEC and Bard Early College to that list, as well as the IB program at Eastern. |
| Basis a chain charter school that just kicks out low performing students whenever they wish, usually after count day. A non-title 1 school, yes they work soooo hard. |
Of course - for many this is a feature not a bug. It’s not about Basis being so great in the abstract. It’s that a critical mass of families have free access to an academic environment that meets their kids where they are at, albeit imperfectly. Some of us have experienced the converse of classrooms weighed down by the need to (understandably and rightly) cater to high-need students and accommodate huge ability and behavioral gaps. Basis isn’t perfect, but it’s a decidedly less chaotic environment for my kid, and oddly much less stress, compared to the HRCS (but still Title 1) we came from. Not for everyone, but it’s been great for our family. And no, I don’t think than necessarily makes Basis “better” than any other school in the abstract —- just well-suited for my kid (and many others). |
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I was sold on BASIS filling the gap until my eldest switched to a parochial high school. He wasn't nearly as used to giving presentations, or working in groups, or diving deep into topics, or doing research, or reading at least one book a week as most of his classmates. Hint: none of those methods of learning feature heavily in BASIS' AP prep focused curriculum. He also wasn't used to having to play a sport, every day. The other students who'd come out of BASIS at his school were in the same boat. He adjusted, but it took him all of freshman year.
Be careful what you believe about a BASIS education, folks. In our experience, the narrowness of the curriculum and weak facilities create as many gaps as they fill. Denying this only works so well. BASIS trains kids to do well on tests. Not much more. |
Yes, there is no doubt in my mind that private/parochial school offers more than BASIS. It would be weird if it didn't. |
Yes - It’s also an open secret that (1) some folks use Basis as a springboard to private high schools (and sometimes middle); (2) private schools respect the Basis rigor vs other public schools; and (3) see an opportunity to “round out” Basis-prepared students. But yes - a $40K/yr school should have various premiums over Basis. |
Notwithstanding the adjustment period, didn’t the private HS ultimately see your child as worthy of admission and capable of success at their institution, in part in view of his academic record at BasisDC? And wasn’t the school correct in their assessment of his upside? This seems like an inadvertent plug for middle school at BasisDC, at least for cost-conscious families with private HS in mind. |
Well, you don't really know why private schools decide what they decide. There are lots of other middle schools from which private schools accept students. And it's not like BASIS students get into every high school they apply to. |
Wait, what? Private schools are not pining for a chance to "round out" students from any one school FFS. You think they're sitting there saying "this poor disadvantaged child has been denied arts and language education, and we can make the world a better place by admitting them"? If anything, BASIS kids get in *despite* the things BASIS has chosen not to offer. |