Stunningly Impressive BASIS College Results

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:yay another basis thread


Are you so petty you can’t celebrate these kids?

If you are, you really can just keep scrolling.

- not affiliated with BASIS


Totally proud of the kids. Well done kids. I find the parents who post about basis really annoying, though. You can’t tell me “stunningly impressive” didn’t make you cringe a bit?


Well, of course it did. But, as an adult, I was able to put that aside in favor of congratulating the students. If I felt I couldn’t do that, I would have kept scrolling.



Well then pat yourself on the back because you’re a better person than me!


Well, that’s damming with faint praise.

Sorry, couldn’t resist.

See? Not so much better.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:yay another basis thread


Are you so petty you can’t celebrate these kids?

If you are, you really can just keep scrolling.

- not affiliated with BASIS


Totally proud of the kids. Well done kids. I find the parents who post about basis really annoying, though. You can’t tell me “stunningly impressive” didn’t make you cringe a bit?


Well, of course it did. But, as an adult, I was able to put that aside in favor of congratulating the students. If I felt I couldn’t do that, I would have kept scrolling.



Well then pat yourself on the back because you’re a better person than me!


At least you know you are a bad person. Please make sure your children know so that we can avoid having more people in the world like you.


Tbf, this is why I don’t like basis threads. But I’m checking out because this genuinely made me feel bad.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:yay another basis thread


Are you so petty you can’t celebrate these kids?

If you are, you really can just keep scrolling.

- not affiliated with BASIS


Totally proud of the kids. Well done kids. I find the parents who post about basis really annoying, though. You can’t tell me “stunningly impressive” didn’t make you cringe a bit?


Well, of course it did. But, as an adult, I was able to put that aside in favor of congratulating the students. If I felt I couldn’t do that, I would have kept scrolling.



Well then pat yourself on the back because you’re a better person than me!


At least you know you are a bad person. Please make sure your children know so that we can avoid having more people in the world like you.


Seems you have no impulse control either. Leave the kids out of it.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I find it hard to believe that BASIS DC is full of Ivy League legacies


My kids aren’t at an age where BASIS is an option but it sure seems “good enough” to send my kids there. It’s a threshold, not a continuous variable. This seems to be the case with a lot of alums I know who want to stay in the city? If a kid is driven enough, the school is good enough (same with Walls and JR).

I don’t anticipate legacy will be a thing though by the time my kids graduate, at least at my former institutions


And also - as someone who works at a university - sorry, the "legacy" trope is moronic. (That's the nicest word I could come up with.) Every time I hear it, I have an instant Princess Bride "you keep using that word, it does not mean what you think it means" reaction. Look, I get that the misperception lingers in large part because it's a useful "whatabout whatabout whatabout" rhetorical device for people who support traditional affirmative action. The implication is that the legacy kids are all homogenous morons and their parents buy their way in or otherwise leverage connections to give them an advantage over more objectively qualified candidates. That these action somehow represent a determinative thumb on the scale, and a high legacy acceptance rate indicates...something or other nefarious or unfair, for reasons.

But the reality - and this fact may shock you, hope you're seated - is that people whose parents were motivated, intelligent and accomplished enough (and yes, in all likelihood, privileged enough, with all the educational and upbringing advantages that brings) to graduate from a selective university within the past 20-30 years or so are likely to both 1) be fairly diverse, 2) have children who achieve similar attainment in those categories and 3) understand the specific attributes their target school seeks in an applicant in a deep and exceptional way that parents who did not attend that institution may not. iow: smart parents have smart kids, and people who lived in a culture for several of their formative years understand it organically in ways those who did not have that experience can't. Film at 11.

When people say "legacy" they make it sound like they're talking about, I don't know, C-student dumb as rocks Jared Kushner's dad buying his kid's way into Harvard. Which he did. You know where Jared Kushner's dad went to school? Hofstra. (those of you who didn't grow up in the NYC area may have to google this one. Let's just say: not a selective institution.) Malia Obama - who by all accounts sounds like a brilliant and accomplished young woman with a stellar pre-college education, even if her last name were "Smith" - was a "legacy" and Jared Kushner was not. Should Harvard NOT admit Malia Obama, because "omg legacy UNFAIR!!1!" ? Give me a freaking break.

The legacy admittance rate is just a reminder that we don't live in a classless society and that exceptional attainment is not achieved in a vacuum. Are the SAT scores, GPAs, extracurriculars, application essays for legacies generally of significantly lower quality than the general student population? It's actually the opposite where I work. And for those cases where they're on the bubble, the interview is almost always stellar in terms of demonstrating their sincere commitment to attend the specific school to which they're applying if they're admitted - which is actually the top currency for admissions offices...and again, this is where parental advantage in preparation comes in. And if you have a problem with this, again: please take it up with capitalism, but there's nothing unethical about it. Their parents prepared them well, so they performed well on a critical metric. Full stop.

[Thank you for attending my annual TED rant on this topic]


This has nothing to do with BASIS; congratulations to all the kids who graduated from there and are going to any colleges, but especially the elite ones mentioned here.

But come on, it's ridiculous to try to claim legacies don't get extra edges. I went to an Ivy League university, and I'm sure the main reason I got in was because my parents had both gone there. I did score very well on the SATs, and my weighted HS GPA was over 4.0, but still: My odds of getting in with the exact same stats and resume were significantly higher because of the family connection. (My parents did not give much to the school, maybe a few hundred dollars a year, but I don't think the legacy admission odds went DOWN because you didn't donate.)

My alma mater, like many others, has stopped giving legacy applicants any additional edge in the formal admissions process, and I think that's good for precisely the reasons you note here: Most legacy kids already have plenty of other advantages baked in. There's no reason we need any additional ones.
Anonymous
So, theory number one: a significantly larger percentage of BASIS seniors got accepted into Ivys/other top schools this year because a much larger than average number of graduates were legacies. Definitely way more legacies this year than any prior year.

Okay. I guess that’s one theory.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So, theory number one: a significantly larger percentage of BASIS seniors got accepted into Ivys/other top schools this year because a much larger than average number of graduates were legacies. Definitely way more legacies this year than any prior year.

Okay. I guess that’s one theory.


I dunno I think the possibility that Walls got worse at picking off kids who get into Ivies after they got rid of the exam is interesting, and falsifiable. That’s another one
Anonymous
Let Basis be Basis.
Anonymous
BASIS senior parent here. I can say with some confidence that only one of the students who secured admission to one of the highly rejective schools mentioned above was a legacy. I can also say that that student had superior rigor in their coursework, even for a school that puts a high premium on APs, and SAT scores to match. A few other facts worth noting. Another student who is headed to an “elite” school is going as a Questbridge Scholar. Another student headed to UMD is the recipient of a coveted Banneker Key full ride scholarship. And if you saw the list of schools that got turned down by some kids,often for financial reasons, you would have to give this BASIS class even more flowers.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:BASIS senior parent here. I can say with some confidence that only one of the students who secured admission to one of the highly rejective schools mentioned above was a legacy. I can also say that that student had superior rigor in their coursework, even for a school that puts a high premium on APs, and SAT scores to match. A few other facts worth noting. Another student who is headed to an “elite” school is going as a Questbridge Scholar. Another student headed to UMD is the recipient of a coveted Banneker Key full ride scholarship. And if you saw the list of schools that got turned down by some kids,often for financial reasons, you would have to give this BASIS class even more flowers.


Acceptances at Oxford, Cornell, Northwestern, Duke, Emory (main), Tufts, UVA, Berkeley to name a few. And this is not just one student who went ham.
Anonymous
That’s just incredibly impressive. It’s a good thing these kids had the opportunity to attend BasisDC. I assume they would have been successful elsewhere but would have not had the cohort effects.
Anonymous
Stunningly impressive indeed!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I have no idea if there’s been a thread on this already, as I’ve largely weaned myself off of this sub-forum, but BASIS DC’s graduating class has some amazing college results. Looking just at where kids are going (vice the multiple choices they had), out of a class of 41 or so, I count: Harvard, Yale, Pomona, Harvey Mudd, Dartmouth, 3-4 Univ of Penn, Navy Academy, Brown, and many more impressive schools.

While kids have always gotten into top schools from BASIS, it seems over one-quarter of this year’s class is going to an Ivy. I wonder why this year is so much more impressive than prior years? (A couple of years ago there was a thread about how unimpressive BASIS’ results were.)


Where’s the IG link for Basis’ c/o 2025?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have no idea if there’s been a thread on this already, as I’ve largely weaned myself off of this sub-forum, but BASIS DC’s graduating class has some amazing college results. Looking just at where kids are going (vice the multiple choices they had), out of a class of 41 or so, I count: Harvard, Yale, Pomona, Harvey Mudd, Dartmouth, 3-4 Univ of Penn, Navy Academy, Brown, and many more impressive schools.

While kids have always gotten into top schools from BASIS, it seems over one-quarter of this year’s class is going to an Ivy. I wonder why this year is so much more impressive than prior years? (A couple of years ago there was a thread about how unimpressive BASIS’ results were.)


Where’s the IG link for Basis’ c/o 2025?


https://www.instagram.com/bdc.2025?igsh=ZzZ2N3I3ZnV3bDZs
Anonymous
^^I know of at least one kid (likely choosing an Ivy) who hasn’t posted yet…
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have no idea if there’s been a thread on this already, as I’ve largely weaned myself off of this sub-forum, but BASIS DC’s graduating class has some amazing college results. Looking just at where kids are going (vice the multiple choices they had), out of a class of 41 or so, I count: Harvard, Yale, Pomona, Harvey Mudd, Dartmouth, 3-4 Univ of Penn, Navy Academy, Brown, and many more impressive schools.

While kids have always gotten into top schools from BASIS, it seems over one-quarter of this year’s class is going to an Ivy. I wonder why this year is so much more impressive than prior years? (A couple of years ago there was a thread about how unimpressive BASIS’ results were.)


Where’s the IG link for Basis’ c/o 2025?


@bdc.2025
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