You’re not buying that different things make different kids happy? Or that kids have different experiences? Ok then. I’ll never understand posters who insist their experience and view of the things is the only correct one. |
|
Not the PP you're responding but kids loving the BASIS middle school? Ridiculous. The high school? Even nuttier. Parents love it, sure.
There are some good teachers, true. The new HoS is much better than the last one, yes. But it remains an unpleasant place. This is a franchise that isn't headed up by educators, explaining why parent organizations are banned (other than the type that fundraises to hand the winnings off to admins). The physical plant is obviously so lousy, and the budget so stretched that strong ECs are impossible. This thread is a waste of time. You tolerate BASIS, you roll with it, obviously. That's all we've done. Total BS that you do more. |
Talk to seniors. They are having a blast! |
| Mine isn't. He's getting very little support for his senior year projects and activities and doesn't want to goof around (like so many of his classmates are doing). |
Our next door neighbor is pretty unhappy with his senior year. He’s basically done by lunch, his classmates are all totally checked out of all ECs (unlike at most HSes where EC leadership is a huge part of senior year) and the school isn’t helping at all with his senior project logistics. He has mostly likely BASIS along the way, but hates the senior year model. Definitely not having a blast other than the break from work being nice. |
We had the opposite - kid is smart and hardworking and was in a cohort with serious behavioral issues and teachers watered things down a ton. This includes adjusting the comps for content not covered. We knew in 7th grade things were going down hill - but it was also after a year + back after covid. It was all a mess. Applied for privates and Walls, went private, junior now - life is grand. |
| +1. Our 7th grade experience wasn't all that different, more recently. |
We hated it, too. My kid found it lonely and a silly waste of time. We ran our kid's senior project logistics ourselves, using our contacts and resources. BASIS did so little to help us that I'm not sure what the point of the senior project was. If I could go back, we'd have found a four-year high school program instead. |
Immediate PP: "If your kid is academically advanced, it will be fine." |
My senior and friends are leading the projects themselves. I have nothing to do with it. But I know mine has found an advisor at a local university, a related internship, has interviewed many people, and is reading tons. Neither I nor the school have provided contacts. It is mostly cold calling, which seems to be working remarkably well. I believe the point is that it is to be self driven. I have not once considered helping and certainly haven’t been asked to help. It is fascinating to watch. In addition to many extracurriculars and large social gatherings occurring seemingly constantly. |
Well that is ridiculous. It can obviously be a bad fit for some academically advanced kids. That is just one factor necessary to be a good fit. |
This. The senior year project is obviously one of those "it is what you make of it" things. Some students will do nothing, some will have parents who do 80 percent of it, and some students will have an amazing experience of their own initiative. That's completely obvious when the year is explained. |
Fit? Assessing multiple factors? What is ridiculous is thinking that there area a lot of free bespoke public school options for academically advanced kids in DC. BASIS is clearly the worst option for such kids…except for all of the others. |
Eh. I think it also depends what you want to do. Our neighbor could do something amazing on paper (parents connections), but what he actually wants to do for a job isn’t something where a HS kid can do anything remotely useful. There are tons of fields where a senior project is a waste of time. This is multiplied for families with no contacts at all in a relevant field. Basically you can pretty easily do something, but doing something actually useful is a crap shoot based on interests. Honestly, it’s a terrible model. |
| I don’t get why my kid couldn’t have had a normal senior year at BASIS, enjoying electives, friendships, more classes, ECs, with some fun senioritis thrown in. It is a terrible model dressed up as something fantastic. Irresponsible of the franchise to run senior year this way. We signed him up for community college classes in the spring, including EMT training, after realizing that he needed far more structure and support to be productive. Every concerned BASIS family wouldn’t have had the wherewithal and bandwidth to salvage senior year like we did. |