Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Ok, former Basis parent here.
Academics at school are good. Good teachers and they expect a lot. Definitely focused on high academic performers.
Outside of that, DS was depressed there. He did well academically. However it being an office building in an office park area, kinda depressing. No real sports program or campus to enjoy. Very little social interaction as a community outside some academic areas. Teacher turnover major problem with school.
Basically, kind of a depressing place if your kids wants to have a good education and balance it with a fun social experience as well. It was not the right place for my kid. It may be for other children. We are now at a Big 5 school where academics are great and he loves the campus and overall experience there.
I’ve seen the school, as my office is in Tysons. It’s so strange to me. I can’t imagine spending a childhood inside that office building . I much prefer the traditional campus life for my kids. They can spend their days in an office park once they enter corporate world. Not before
I’m sorry that your bitter that you’re kid couldn’t get into BIM. Let it go
More personal attacks based on no evidence whatsoever, since you don't know who posted this.
That sounds like the BIM culture, vicious personal attacks on all critics and an utter disregard for actual standards of logic or evidence in your "arguments" all the time.
Not a culture most parents would want to put their kids or themselves in.
I don't understand why so many people feel the need to attack someone they don't know or criticize a school for which they have no personal experience. I know many Basis parents of higher grades, and they are lovely people who want the best for their child. Perhaps their child does not like sports, and prefers academics only. For whatever reasons, they make decisions which they feel are in their child's best interest. Comments from BIM parent calling another parent "bitter that you're kid couldn't get into BIM" reflects badly on that parent, and unfortunately badly on the school as well.
I am a BIM parent of a child in the early learning program. ELP is excellent. I cannot speak for the upper grades, and comments like these from a BIM parent are disappointing.