What’s this about paying the teachers? |
Parent donations go to top off teacher pay, is my understanding. Agree that the public school options in DC are not great. BASIS at least has a very good curriculum, and once parents have exposure to it, it's becomes really hard to go backwards to DCPS, even though BASIS is full of flaws. |
I'm a Basis parent who tries not to be a "booster." The facilities suck, the extracurriculars are often good but definitely limited because it's a small school with lousy facilities, the teacher quality is generally good but highly variable, and yes, it's inflexible. But 1) the cost to DC taxpayers is the same as other charters and more importantly, 2) the students could not do what they do elsewhere. Middle school academics are much stronger than any DCPS and all but a few other charters, and HS academics are much stronger than all but JR and the best selective schools. My kids are smart enough and hard working enough to do well at Basis. But they are definitely not hard working enough to do a lot of extra independent work, which is what they would have to do to get to the level they are at other schools. |
From where I sit, it's not that BASIS students aren't working hard enough to do a lot of extra independent work. The problem is that they aren't encouraged to take much initiative as students from the get-go, because the program exists for AP test prep. The result is that students aren't encouraged to study any subject past the AP level. A dynamic intellectual environment for teens can't emerge from this picture along with much in the way of joy of learning or character/ethics training.
The non-democratic BASIS parents organization (the BASIS Arizona franchise bans formal PTAs or parent organizations) hits you up for a donation to top up teachers' pay at least once a month. You can ignore them, but they do their utmost to shame you into submissions. The arrangement is warped, sad and downright weird. |
the most galling part is that it's a for-profit operation, so you're making donations because they don't have a big enough profit margin. And before you say it, yeah, yeah, yeah the local charter is operated by a non-profit, but they pay the for-profit for curriculum and management and rent. |
Agreed, the most galling part.
We couldn't wait to leave BASIS, our stressed out straight-A kids most of all, so glad we did. |
Where did you go? |
It's not worth it... except for the shareholders in Phoenix. |
+1. Bunch of Basis haters here who didn’t do their research and whose kids washed out. Pathetic. |
Most people "wash out"... statisically your kids will as well. |
Total BS. We did our research. Plenty. We lasted four years. Our eldest was in the top math group the entire time but made few friends and felt isolated socially. The leadership was more miserable, and the teaching more uneven, than we could have imagined. Our kids certainly didn't wash out academically. No, all three made 90s Club or better the entire time. They simply disliked BASIS. When the eldest refused to stay for high school we bailed for J-R and Deal for the younger sibs by moving to a small house we own in NW. Not great options but much happier ones. The dreary program should not expand. |
This is it. Basis lures hopeful parents in with promises of high achieving - but those kids who will high achieve there can do it anywhere - why not send them somewhere that makes them happy? Everyone else will wash out and be discouraged by the process … such a shame. But hey - those shareholders want their money!!! |
BASIS also lures parents with promises of great teaching, but the teaching is remarkably uneven. They're not paying, or treating, teachers well enough to keep many of the good ones for very long. We got fed up with how BASIS serves as a training program for teachers who soon find better working conditions in the burbs or DCPS. This isn't a model that should be expanded in DC for your tax dollars. |
Do you really think that most smart, motivated kids who would take a dozen AP courses will "high achieve" at any neighborhood DCPS HS? Or even say, McKinley? Yes, they might do fine at Walls, JR, private schools, or some schools in MD or VA, but that's not "anywhere." |
Give us a break, it's the rare BASIS junior who's taken a dozen AP courses and exams. Few BASIS seniors bother with more APs.
PP above obviously meant anywhere where many AP or IB Diploma classes are taught to a high standard to a high-achieving cohort. |