In some cases 3 levels higher at Basis but the normal progression is already advanced. Basis has the highest math scores in DC but DCI is really low—most students at DCI are below grade level in math. CAPE Math 4 or 5 Basis 68.4% DCI 26.5% |
kids at SH and EH can take algebra in 7th. |
Tell me all about your high performing 11 year old. Lol. |
The Basis is tiring. The school self selects. If DCI self selects then sure their scores would be higher. Also the kids at Basis takes PARCC levels behind the math they are taking. No other schools manipulated the testing like this. Lastly, that is the whole point of tracking is that the more advance kids would be in separate, more challenging classes. |
Here are the things I wish SH and EH and John Francis had: A real science curriculum (all schools currently testing below 10 percent proficiency on science, and the teacher who chimed in said the DCPS curriculum is off) The requirement to read full length novels More handwritten note taking and assignments Math is fine. John Francis needs to start offering geometry by 8th. BASIS is a deeply imperfect and weird school, but it does all of the above things well. If DCPS schools in this middle part of the city did too, you would see a hugely increased interest in those middle schools. |
I don’t think those are any different from any other DCPS though … and my kid has read a few novels. |
Dumb. 1. The school self-selects? You don’t know what self-selects means. The school is 100% lottery. 2. Because kids at Basis are taking advanced math and take algebra and geometry in both 7th and 8th, they take whatever the CAPE exams available to them. The school doesn't base their curriculum on DC testing requirements. 3. Basis has tracking in math. |
Yes! Far more robust foreign language options would also be very good. |
PP here. You seem really ignorant. Data is there to know where your kid stands, report cards, teachers feedback. Yes my kid is high performing who scores 98% plus on standardized testing, etc, great report cards, teachers comments, etc… Your kid it sounds like is not. If you choose to put your average, grade level kid at SH so he can be at the top of the heap since the overwhelming majority are below grade level, that’s your prerogative. I want my kid in classes that challenge him, not be bored and coast. I actually want him to be with kids smarter than him so he has to actually work hard and reach his full potential. |
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Ok! you want your kid in clases full of 99% kids! ok where are you going to make that happen? good luck!!! |
honestly why tf are you here? Your kid is so advanced yet you cannot read a room. clearly all you want to do is brag about how your kid is too good for the local MS and how wonderful a parent you are. whoop dee doo! |
You have a reading comprehension problem because I simply answered someone who did not believe that I knew my kid was high performing. I answered that with objective data, not any subjective BS. I did not volunteered it out of the blue. BTW there are lots of kids in the top 2% in this town. Much more than your average city. What is sad is that DCPS loses all these kids and even the top 10-15% to charters and privates because they simply don’t care to meet the needs of the higher performing kids. |
Is it different at Hardy? |
Forget Hardy. It’s still DCPS. Plus now kids are no longer tracking to JR but McArthur. And JR now doesn’t even have honors classes in 9th, 10th. They took it away because of “equity”. That should tell you the direction DCPS is going. Move to Arlington. It’s actually closer and easier to access downtown if you work there. There is tracking for all subjects, and you get the big added benefit of cheap, great in state colleges which could easily save you over 6 figures. |