Anonymous wrote:OP Here. My post is not meant to bash BASIS at all, but to share an experience that I've witnessed of many families that are no longer at the school. If your kid is succeeding there, that's awesome. If only every kid could...But every kid can't, and most of the families that I know that have left have all left for the same reason, and their kids aren't all the exact same types of learners, but they are all indeed very bright.
I hope that parents really look at BASIS, or any school for that matter, and really decide what is best for their child and know that even without the rigor of BASIS, their kid can have aspirations to and can become a biomedical engineer, still, or whatever they (like another poster said) want to. Any child that excels through high school at BASIS has to be an exceptional student and has to welcome the challenge that BASIS offers.
I believe these parents (my friends) thought their kids were ready for this school, but didn't think long enough about it. I was ready to enroll my son right up til the 1st day of school, and got cold feet. After thinking long and hard, I didn't see it as the right fit for him. I just hope every parent looks at any school carefully before enrolling their child, and that goes for schools which wouldn't be challenging enough for their kids as well.
Anonymous wrote:OP Here. My post is not meant to bash BASIS at all, but to share an experience that I've witnessed of many families that are no longer at the school. If your kid is succeeding there, that's awesome. If only every kid could...But every kid can't, and most of the families that I know that have left have all left for the same reason, and their kids aren't all the exact same types of learners, but they are all indeed very bright.
I hope that parents really look at BASIS, or any school for that matter, and really decide what is best for their child and know that even without the rigor of BASIS, their kid can have aspirations to and can become a biomedical engineer, still, or whatever they (like another poster said) want to. Any child that excels through high school at BASIS has to be an exceptional student and has to welcome the challenge that BASIS offers.
I believe these parents (my friends) thought their kids were ready for this school, but didn't think long enough about it. I was ready to enroll my son right up til the 1st day of school, and got cold feet. After thinking long and hard, I didn't see it as the right fit for him. I just hope every parent looks at any school carefully before enrolling their child, and that goes for schools which wouldn't be challenging enough for their kids as well.
Anonymous wrote:There are several of my friends whose kids were the first to attend the school when it first opened, and now I know none that will be attending 9th or 10th grade there. All of their kids were doing well in 7th and started falling behind in 8th. The end-of-year comps and the stress of taking on AP classes before they're ready and the lack of a traditional high school feel has sent them running for "safety" elsewhere. Most of these kids were bright, and interested in learning and at the top of their respective schools upon entering BASIS. There was a large group who knew each other -- we even ran into several kids that we'd seen in pre-K at the testing day three years ago.
I'm very glad I didn't send my son there. He would have been miserable! He would have ended up leaving for Walls, Wilson, Latin, etc. for high school where there's not so much pressure to make the school look good but more emphasis on the student actually absorbing what they're learning. I don't knock BASIS for the few kids who enjoy the fast pace of learning, but I don't think it's necessarily a good thing or necessary for anyone to be successful in life to be that stressed out in school. School is about so much more than retaining tons of new facts that are heaped upon you constantly and pulled out of you at comps time. Any parent who carefully considers their child's well-being would seriously second-guess a school like this. This is not the best way to learn - it's the best way for kids to become anxious, depressed, and worse from what I hear from so many parents.
The kids that have left are so much happier and well-adjusted, have tons of friends, and are doing well academically in their new schools. They find school to be a fun and balanced place to learn, as well as to grow physically and socially without the dreaded surprise of failing a class during the last week of school. BASIS probably wants to open an elementary school because they know the high school model will not survive much longer. The graduation rate if actually calculated from the cohort of ALL the kids that started in 5th grade would be depressingly low. And the founders should be ashamed of that.
- parent of future biomedical engineer and current 10th-grade honors and athlete-student at a non-BASIS charter school