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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Basis fills a gap that shouldn’t exist."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]The problem with BASIS is that it's not "really simple" as somebody claimed on the last page, not at all. Many 5th graders seem like a good fit for BASIS, so they are sent by their well-meaning parents. From what I've observed, few of these kids "wash out;" no mistake was made in sending them. What happens is that the teaching proves to be so uneven, the leadership so prone to gaslighting families who encounter difficulties, the facility so lousy, the curriculum so rigid and narrowly focused on test taking, that most BASIS families get turned off the experience over time and leave. Sure, you can always pull out, but it might be better to face the reality that BASIS is risky business compared to most DMV schools offering consistent rigor from the get-go. BASIS just not a very welcoming program offering a rich or happy educational experience to young people. There are a lot of sharp elbows at BASIS and not much of a community feel. When we left for a private, we were glad to feel included but dismayed to discover that our BASIS MS grad wasn't as well prepared as we'd hoped, other than for chemistry and biology. Heading to BASIS is to roll the dice in a somewhat risky game of chance. Best to see it that way to hedge your bets, to avoid getting hurt. If you can afford a stronger program/school pyramid that's a better bet for both MS & HS or are willing to move for one, do it. [/quote] We are dealing with people that stayed the course in DC until late elementary whereas a good deal of truly risk averse types would have never even consider it or decamped to the burbs or private early on. They’ve already rolled the dice so to speak. If Basis bought a few free years before going private, any minor adjustment/catch-up seems immaterial, or at least a bet that paid off. And I sort of trust private school admissions committees to assess whether a kid (coming from Basis or wherever) will be a good fit for their school. This is precisely how we are using Basis - a way station before private — admittedly a bit easier for us because a sibling is already in that pipeline and we are quite confident that our Basis student will be more than fine upon the eventual transition — and we’ll be about $80K less out of pocket. [/quote] Assuming 2 kids at a Big 3 you are still paying around $400,000 more than the parents whose kids stay the course at Basis. Given that Basis HS is definitely better than MS (better teachers, better classes, fewer students), someone might question that financial decision.[/quote] If the HS was so great,Basis would not lose 1/2 the kids after 8th. The retention rate is not very good.[/quote] Wrong. They don’t lose 1/2 of kids after 8th. The fact that Basis has attrition is no surprise. The school is 100% lottery; many kids can’t handle the rigor and should have stayed in their in-bounds school or looked elsewhere; and Basis doesn’t socially promote or backfill. No other school, public or private, does that in the area. Basis has, per capita, the best college admissions of any public school in DC. Obviously, plenty of smart kids stay to graduate.[/quote]
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