Will basis move their waitlist this week or are they done?

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Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


Yes, given that it is a high-SES school with very few at-risk kids and is constantly patting itself on the back for "rigor". BASIS' push-out policy (which you will deny exists) makes it functionally a test-in school after 5th grade, and a high-income one at that.

Why don't you tell us again why so many kids at BASIS do poorly on the math PARCC.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


Yes, given that it is a high-SES school with very few at-risk kids and is constantly patting itself on the back for "rigor". BASIS' push-out policy (which you will deny exists) makes it functionally a test-in school after 5th grade, and a high-income one at that.

Why don't you tell us again why so many kids at BASIS do poorly on the math PARCC.


Because DC as a whole sucks at the math PARCC and BASIS' scores are WAY ahead of everyone else's? Also you take the PARCC for the math class you're taking not the grade you're in, so BASIS passes up better PARCC scores by letting a higher percentage of kids accelerate.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



NP who really doesn’t have a strong feeling either way about Basis but that re-enrollment percent for black kids is really troubling. Has this been investigated?
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


What do you mean, “best scores at a non-test school.” For grades that take the PARCC, Basis itself is the only test-in high school in the city.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


What do you mean, “best scores at a non-test school.” For grades that take the PARCC, Basis itself is the only test-in high school in the city.


Not a test-in school genius.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


Yes, given that it is a high-SES school with very few at-risk kids and is constantly patting itself on the back for "rigor". BASIS' push-out policy (which you will deny exists) makes it functionally a test-in school after 5th grade, and a high-income one at that.

Why don't you tell us again why so many kids at BASIS do poorly on the math PARCC.


Are you lying or just misinformed?

Here are 9th grade math proficiency scores after kids have been at Basis (a 100% lottery school) for a few years. They are the highest in DC--even higher than selective schools such as Walls and Banneker. that cherry pick their students.

Basis: 77.36
Banneker: 66.56
Walls: 55.4
Latin: 30.11
DCI: 21.37
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


Yes, given that it is a high-SES school with very few at-risk kids and is constantly patting itself on the back for "rigor". BASIS' push-out policy (which you will deny exists) makes it functionally a test-in school after 5th grade, and a high-income one at that.

Why don't you tell us again why so many kids at BASIS do poorly on the math PARCC.


Are you lying or just misinformed?

Here are 9th grade math proficiency scores after kids have been at Basis (a 100% lottery school) for a few years. They are the highest in DC--even higher than selective schools such as Walls and Banneker. that cherry pick their students.

Basis: 77.36
Banneker: 66.56
Walls: 55.4
Latin: 30.11
DCI: 21.37


It's not a 100% lottery school, it's a school that intentionally pushes out students it doesn't want. Hence the low retention rate for SPED.

You keep comparing BASIS to other schools, but so what? My point is that BASIS' test scores are unimpressive relative to its own demographics. Comparing to Latin is not relevant because Latin takes new kids in 9th and offers Equitable Access preference, which BASIS refuses to do because it l's hard work.
Anonymous
BASIS does a better job supporting my 2E kid than any other DC public school would.

While we find the special education team a bit lackluster, the curriculum keeps us at the school. My child would be bored anywhere else and feels supported at BASIS, not “pushed out.”
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:BASIS does a better job supporting my 2E kid than any other DC public school would.

While we find the special education team a bit lackluster, the curriculum keeps us at the school. My child would be bored anywhere else and feels supported at BASIS, not “pushed out.”


Basis doesn’t push out advanced kids, whether sped or not.
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


Yes, given that it is a high-SES school with very few at-risk kids and is constantly patting itself on the back for "rigor". BASIS' push-out policy (which you will deny exists) makes it functionally a test-in school after 5th grade, and a high-income one at that.

Why don't you tell us again why so many kids at BASIS do poorly on the math PARCC.


Are you lying or just misinformed?

Here are 9th grade math proficiency scores after kids have been at Basis (a 100% lottery school) for a few years. They are the highest in DC--even higher than selective schools such as Walls and Banneker. that cherry pick their students.

Basis: 77.36
Banneker: 66.56
Walls: 55.4
Latin: 30.11
DCI: 21.37


It's not a 100% lottery school, it's a school that intentionally pushes out students it doesn't want. Hence the low retention rate for SPED.

You keep comparing BASIS to other schools, but so what? My point is that BASIS' test scores are unimpressive relative to its own demographics. Comparing to Latin is not relevant because Latin takes new kids in 9th and offers Equitable Access preference, which BASIS refuses to do because it l's hard work.


You come off as delusional. Words have meaning my friend. It is a 100% lottery school. That is not debatable.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don't let in anyone after 5th grade. Even siblings


Per the head of school last year, they will offer seats in older grades if and only if the total number of students not returning (seniors plus attrition) exceeds something like 135 students.


I didn’t realize they offer any seats. Isn’t their position the curriculum is so advanced that they can’t backfill seats?


It's that their teachers aren't up to the challenge. Because it's soooo haaaaaard to do what most schools in this country do routinely.


At this point the BASIS Haterade club can't even figure out what they are mad at. Why do you care if BASIS adds 6th 7th 8th or no graders above 5th? This isn't about your kid not getting a slot because you seem angry at BASIS so obviously you wouldn't take it if offered. So what's your deal? Is it jealousy? You and yours spend a LOT of time on DCUM trying to convince parents who are at BASIS that what they know and think about the school doesn't matter. Based on the WL data, BASIS is getting harder to get into over time, not easier, so other than howling at the moon, what's in it for you? Why do you spend more time thinking and caring about BASIS than those who have kids there?


Because I call out BS when I see it. BASIS doesn't backfill because it's hard and they don't want to. That's the real reason. Plenty of schools across the country do it just fine, but not BASIS.


You didn't answer the question. Why are you so invested here? Why do you care where they get their 650 seats from? This angers you why?


Because I think letting one school shirk the harder stuff is bad for the system as a whole, and I think parents should know that BASIS' so-called "success" is founded on taking the easy path when they can get away with it.


Parents whose kids are at the school sent them there to be challenged and get them the heck away from virtue signalers like you who care more about the press release and faux "equity" than a quality education. No on at BASIS or Latin sits around and laments the lack of socially promoted, grade levels behind, disruptive kids in their classes. Give it a break.


I just don't think serving the easiest kids is a mark of quality, but you do you.


You are totally right. BASIS is a terrible school that doesn't provide rigor. Everyone who is there and happy just doesn't understand the school as well as you do. Good point. Thank the lord you are on the case.



I understand that people choose BASIS anyway. And I don't think it's a terrible school. But I do think its stats are not especially impressive in the context of its low at-risk percentage, high-SES student body, and shirking service of students with special needs and new arrivals. It's not that great, but has certain demographic manipulation policies that make it look better compared to schools that are serving different kids. That's not the same thing as quality or good teaching.

But hey why don't you go ahead and explain why the math PARCC scores are so low. And why re-enrollment of African-American students is only 77%. We're all ears.



Best scores in city at non-test in school. You would prefer...higher?


Yes, given that it is a high-SES school with very few at-risk kids and is constantly patting itself on the back for "rigor". BASIS' push-out policy (which you will deny exists) makes it functionally a test-in school after 5th grade, and a high-income one at that.

Why don't you tell us again why so many kids at BASIS do poorly on the math PARCC.


Are you lying or just misinformed?

Here are 9th grade math proficiency scores after kids have been at Basis (a 100% lottery school) for a few years. They are the highest in DC--even higher than selective schools such as Walls and Banneker. that cherry pick their students.

Basis: 77.36
Banneker: 66.56
Walls: 55.4
Latin: 30.11
DCI: 21.37


It's not a 100% lottery school, it's a school that intentionally pushes out students it doesn't want. Hence the low retention rate for SPED.

You keep comparing BASIS to other schools, but so what? My point is that BASIS' test scores are unimpressive relative to its own demographics. Comparing to Latin is not relevant because Latin takes new kids in 9th and offers Equitable Access preference, which BASIS refuses to do because it l's hard work.


You come off as delusional. Words have meaning my friend. It is a 100% lottery school. That is not debatable.


It's not, it's a school that starts with lottery and then pushes out SPED kids and denies it. Actions have meaning too.

I see that you have no comments on the low retention rate for SPED, and on the inapplicability of comparison to other schools with different demographics. Do you have any remarks to make on BASIS' poor retention of AA students, or BASIS' refusal to offer the Equitable Action preference?
Anonymous
PP, I think we can all agree that BASIS does not socially promote. But it is a 100 percent lottery school.

You're entitled to your opinions about whether a school should or shouldn't socially promote, or actively seek out the most at-risk students. BASIS does neither.

But they do accept kids 100 percent through the lottery system.

In my opinion an admissions exam would be better than the current system of not promoting kids who can't handle the curriculum. But DC politics won't allow it. So we are where we are.

-- Signed happy parent of a BASIS SPED kid with a robust IEP
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:PP, I think we can all agree that BASIS does not socially promote. But it is a 100 percent lottery school.

You're entitled to your opinions about whether a school should or shouldn't socially promote, or actively seek out the most at-risk students. BASIS does neither.

But they do accept kids 100 percent through the lottery system.

In my opinion an admissions exam would be better than the current system of not promoting kids who can't handle the curriculum. But DC politics won't allow it. So we are where we are.

-- Signed happy parent of a BASIS SPED kid with a robust IEP


Why do you think the SPED and AA retention is so low?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:PP, I think we can all agree that BASIS does not socially promote. But it is a 100 percent lottery school.

You're entitled to your opinions about whether a school should or shouldn't socially promote, or actively seek out the most at-risk students. BASIS does neither.

But they do accept kids 100 percent through the lottery system.

In my opinion an admissions exam would be better than the current system of not promoting kids who can't handle the curriculum. But DC politics won't allow it. So we are where we are.

-- Signed happy parent of a BASIS SPED kid with a robust IEP


Why do you think the SPED and AA retention is so low?


NP. I think retention is low because it's a difficult school, and parents have other options. BASIS does not "kick out" anyone. I have one kid at BASIS, and another kid with an IEP. I am considering whether a intense and test-heavy curriculum is really the right choice for my IEP kid. We might try it, and if it doesn't work out, we will leave. I expect that my kid will receive her legally mandated services and supports, but I don't expect BASIS to compromise their standards simply because my kid has an IEP.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:PP, I think we can all agree that BASIS does not socially promote. But it is a 100 percent lottery school.

You're entitled to your opinions about whether a school should or shouldn't socially promote, or actively seek out the most at-risk students. BASIS does neither.

But they do accept kids 100 percent through the lottery system.

In my opinion an admissions exam would be better than the current system of not promoting kids who can't handle the curriculum. But DC politics won't allow it. So we are where we are.

-- Signed happy parent of a BASIS SPED kid with a robust IEP


Why do you think the SPED and AA retention is so low?


NP. I think retention is low because it's a difficult school, and parents have other options. BASIS does not "kick out" anyone. I have one kid at BASIS, and another kid with an IEP. I am considering whether a intense and test-heavy curriculum is really the right choice for my IEP kid. We might try it, and if it doesn't work out, we will leave. I expect that my kid will receive her legally mandated services and supports, but I don't expect BASIS to compromise their standards simply because my kid has an IEP.


And the AA retention?

Why has BASIS chosen not to implement Equitable Access Preference like many other schools have done?
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