Hello Kettle. Yawn. |
| BASIS is simply inflexible. The best way for your kid to succeed there is go in prepped to question nothing, with a determination to stay that way for up to 8 years. |
| True. |
You overestimate how well foreign languages are taught in public schools in DC. Kids can take Spanish at Deal for 3 years and not hold a basic conversation. Plenty of kids spent years at Yu Ying and speak very limited Mandarin. Unfortunately, except for a few places like DLI in Monterey and the MTC in Salt Lake City, the US does a poor job teaching languages. And that is especially true in public schools. |
If "question nothing" means don't try to change the curriculum, OK. But are there many schools where students have significant input on the structure of classes? But if by "question nothing" you envision a silent classroom with bunch of kids writing down notes and not being asked or asking questions or having class discussions, that's not the impression I get from my middle schoolers or what I overheard last year during remote school. My kids seem to be more engaged than they were in elementary school specifically because they are learning more challenging material. |
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The original poster already chose BASIS and wants some advice from current parents about how her kid can succeed.
Rather than respond, we have seen a bunch of parents with kids at other schools lob silly, immature attacks on BASIS. Seriously, no one cares what you think. If you are bothering to respond to a thread where you have nothing to contribute, you must be unemployed, bored at work, and/or with a lot of psychological baggage about the school(s) you did choose for your kids. That is just pathetic. Go post elsewhere. |
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You guys sound like you don't know what you're missing. I bailed on DC public schools, eight years, in favor of sending my kids to a public middle school in VA, where my ex lives (we share custody). The school gives students much more choice over what they study than BASIS DC does. I don't know this because my kids have attended BASIS; I know it because I taught there at one point.
Language instruction is offered in five languages at my kids' school, along with ASL (American Sign Language) and on-line language classes in a computer lab through a UVA-sponsored program. A dozen languages are offered on-line, through the college level, for those who don't like their options on campus. Kids can test into advanced math and science for 7th and 8th grades. They can also take band, orchestra and chorus as daily classes, and a variety of electives supported by good facilities, Now I deal with counselors and admins who offer us flexibility if I make a good case for flexibility. |
No question, the material at BASIS is more challenging than at other DC middle schools, and the teaching better overall. But the atmosphere can be stifling. The comments on this thread are telling. Don't care for a rigid policy? Shut up. Go away. No recourse. If you're fine with the lack of flexibility and the limits of the building, BASIS should work out well for you from the get-go. Good luck. |
This is such an interesting comment. Do you have any sense why your child manages to get it all done in school? Do they have a study hall period that he uses, that the other kids don't use? My kid is pretty good at doing his homework but he HATES homework. He loves getting it done it school. But I was always led to believe that BASIS had so much homework, the kids were inevitably stuck with hours of it. |
yesss my 10 year old is definitely going to advocate for ethics training. |
I mean ... BASIS is not a language immersion school. Am I missing something? The whole point of the charter system is that schools get to develop different approaches to education. Not sure why BASIS should also be expected to be an immersion school? |
| Yes, missing something. Instruction in modern languages is increasingly common for 5th-7th graders in the highest-performing school districts around the country. That's been the trend for a good 30 years now. As the parent with the kid in the school in VA pointed out, schools are embracing language teaching software to expand curricular options beyond what can be taught in classrooms. Yet BASIS franchise leaders view middle school language instruction as a liability which could impede access to elite colleges on the part of their highest-performing students later on. The fact that the policy is myopic isn't lost on all BASIS middle school parents. |
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The posts on the last few pages highlight the cardinal rule of a BASIS education, coming at it from different directions.
The rule is a one size fits all education. That's what franchise leaders believe works best as college prep. If you don't buy into the formula, your child is unlikely to succeed, OP. |
Ok so ... that's what you get when you chose a charter? if you want more say in the curriculum, pick a school governed by a school board or mayor or chancellor that you can lobby. |
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I have two middle schoolers, both with averages ranging from 97 to 98.
One spends about 20 minutes per night on homework. The other spends none. They both get their homework done at school. And neither studies for tests. |