Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had children at both schools - although no one who has switched schools - and my observation is that the teaching quality was considerably higher at Deal and that the sense of "investedness" in students' success was also higher. I can't speak to your other questions.
I'm deciding between Basis and Hardy right now and wonder if others had this same sense of the comparison between Basis and Deal. Was my impression that the teachers at Basis were pretty good? Am worried about the 2 hours a night of homework at Basis but also worry about my child not getting enough academic challenge at Hardy.
I don't have experience with Basis, Hardy, or Deal, but do have one child at a very good local private school, and 2 hours of homework a night is about average at our school for 7th and 8th grade (there was less in 6th), so I'm not sure that Basis is that far from the norm. I'm interested in the 2 PPs' report of an average of 30 min/night at Deal--seems really low for this area, which is not necessarily a bad thing, but is surprising.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask the Exceptional Student Advocacy Director at BASIS-she can send you to at least one parrent I know of who has done the switch with a kid with an IEP this year. I am sure there are others she knows about as well. She also is very wise and can give you solid info and advice.[/quot
Exceptional Student Advocacy Director? Is that really someone's title? wtf?
Also, "teachers" at Basis may have may have degrees in their subject area but are not trained or credentialed teachers. Teaching is an actual profession, not something to be improvised. My guess is that the young basis staff may realize that they are in over their heads and leave. Teaching middle school requires quite a professional set of specialized skills. Just ask the certified teachers at deal or hardy.
Can't let the WTF dig pass although we are veering far from OP's thoughtful questions.
"Exceptional Student" is a new-ish term for special ed. Used more in other parts of the country than in DC. Idea is to get past negative stereotypes associated with special ed and also capture the full range of kids including those who are "2e" (gifted with learning differences).
Anonymous wrote:Ask the Exceptional Student Advocacy Director at BASIS-she can send you to at least one parrent I know of who has done the switch with a kid with an IEP this year. I am sure there are others she knows about as well. She also is very wise and can give you solid info and advice.[/quot
Exceptional Student Advocacy Director? Is that really someone's title? wtf?
Also, "teachers" at Basis may have may have degrees in their subject area but are not trained or credentialed teachers. Teaching is an actual profession, not something to be improvised. My guess is that the young basis staff may realize that they are in over their heads and leave. Teaching middle school requires quite a professional set of specialized skills. Just ask the certified teachers at deal or hardy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had children at both schools - although no one who has switched schools - and my observation is that the teaching quality was considerably higher at Deal and that the sense of "investedness" in students' success was also higher. I can't speak to your other questions.
I'm deciding between Basis and Hardy right now and wonder if others had this same sense of the comparison between Basis and Deal. Was my impression that the teachers at Basis were pretty good? Am worried about the 2 hours a night of homework at Basis but also worry about my child not getting enough academic challenge at Hardy.
Anonymous wrote:I have had children at both schools - although no one who has switched schools - and my observation is that the teaching quality was considerably higher at Deal and that the sense of "investedness" in students' success was also higher. I can't speak to your other questions.
Anonymous wrote:
I have a 7th grader at Deal and can answer a couple of your questions based on her experience. Testing is not multiple choice. Despite the large number of kids at the school, the way kids are broken down into teams makes the school seem much smaller so that kids and parents can get to know the students and teachers on their team; teachers are great about communicating and have been available and responsive to emails. Students take 6 classes per day, and homework varies from 10 minutes to 2 hours per night, but most nights it's about 30 minutes of homework. That's my experience, FWIW. Good luck!