Yes, I assume this is exactly what BASIS is going for to fill its K-5 initially. I wanted to know if I could enroll my Ker and then bring him back to his IB after a week once we've taken the sibling preference for my 4th grader. |
Yup. People with acceptable IB elementaries could totally do that. Hard for the little kid, but maybe worth it in the big picture. |
+1. PCSB staff recommended approving Basis for K-4 but adding a grade a year so Basis would have a full k-4 in 4 years. This is normal PCSB caution (in 2012, Basis 5-12 had to start with 5-8 and add one grade from 9-12 each year over the next 4 years; other charters such as DCI have had a similar staggered start). But, still, the approval is there. I think that Basis is peeved because obviously they have a lot of experience in this area and a great track record. In less than a decade, they created the top-ranked middle school AND high school in Washington, DC. Plus, they now have over 50 other Basis schools (back in 2012, Basis DC was the first Basis charter outside of Arizona), many of which are among the top 100 public schools in the US (Basis also has the #1 ranked public high school in the US). Given that, it seems kind of insulting for PCSB staff to decline to recommend that Basis be allowed to open up a k-4 elementary school the first year--especially given that they let Basis start in 2012 with 5-8. Most of charter schools in DC are pretty terrible and, of course, PCSB recently dealt with the Eagle debacle. But lumping Basis in with these other schools and derailing Basis' quite detailed and justified expansion plans to jumpstart a k-4 elementary school is just dumb bureaucratic inertia and thwarts school choice. |
You’re talking about a pretty select group of private schools. There are many private schools more in the $20k/year range — less than what most people in this area spend on daycare. The vast majority of Brent families certainly can afford private school (I offer no opinion as to whether they will prefer it). |
It's untrue that there are many private schools accessible to Ward 6 families in the "20K/year range." My eldest, strong student, applied to half a dozen parochial elementary schools within a 45-min drive of us, near Brent, for both 4th grade admission and 5th. He wasn't admitted to any schools the first time around and just one the second, off the WL. The harsh truth is that most K-12 DC privates offer few spots after K. Things aren't all that much better in admissions for parochial high schools that aren't fed by their own middle schools. Most of his Brent pals from the lower grades are at BASIS. We know for a fact that most of these families have struck out at every vaguely affordable private school they've tried for. |
Sibling attending preference: "Please note that at most schools, this preference is meant to allow siblings to attend the same school at the same time. If you withdraw the "attending" student for the following school year, it is possible that your sibling preference, and subsequent enrollment, match or waitlist offer, will be revoked." Sibling offered preference: "Please note that at most schools, this preference is meant to allow siblings to attend the same school at the same time. If the sibling who was offered a space at the school does not enroll at that school or later enrolls at another school, the “sibling offered” preference may be removed for all siblings that applied to that same school. This may result in the siblings losing their match, or moving down on the waitlist at that school." I'm pretty sure if enough people did what you're describing, BASIS could and would just revoke enrollment and offer a spot to the next student on the waitlist. |
No, because at-risk families aren't going to drag their kindergarten kids to wherever basis locates its elementary school. They are not going to switch a kid at k when they enrolled somewhere else for pk. Basis knows this and is happy to design an elementary school that, like its middle and high school, is desirable primarily to wealthier families. I will believe otherwise if they try to locate their new campus at the Eagle academy building in Congress heights. |
Basis doesn’t care what you think or believe. There will be plenty of interest when the new elementary school opens. Options are always good. There are 135 charter schools in DC. If you don’t like Basis, go to one or stay at your in-bounds school. |
$40k/ yr is still a LOT and no there are not that many parochial schools around |
The schools are more like 50k+ per year per kid. Also agree with the PP, there are not that many parochial high schools accessible to the Hill. |
+1 also chiming in to say for every one of the ward 6 parents confident that their voice will get BASIS elementary shut down before it gets off the ground, there are five parents supporting this new school. Don't believe everything you read on DCUM (my post of course included). |
Above is nonsense. No secret that Ward 6 has half a dozen hard-won decent elementary schools that the new BASIS program would hurt. There definitely aren't five parents supporting this new school. Yea, don't believe everything you read on DCUM, particularly the BS above.
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+ A million times. This thread was hijacked by a few pathetic BASIS haters. Haters, please get therapy for BDS (BASIS Derangement Syndrome) and send your kids to one of the hundreds of schools in the DC area that isn’t BASIS. Leave BASIS DC to the rest of us. |
Leave BASIS to...the rest of us? You have a right to enroll in their non-existent elementary school and lottery admissions 5th-12th grade program? What's your secret? We never got off the waiting list for two kids and now pay for private school.
Everybody who criticizes BASIS for any reason on DCUM, however valid and well-substantiated, is a hater. Got it. |
Stop beating a straw person. |