Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public schools are for everyone. If you want exclusivity, then you need private or magnet. Neither of which are charters.
BASIS DC is the least exclusive of any charter school in DC. Every single family that wanted a spot for the fall got one.
Furthermore, I overhead one of the administrators say at an information session that if more families wanted spots than the charter allowed, they were planning to go back to the the Charter Board to amend the charter to increase the number of spots.
Basis won't have the room or funding to offer every interested family a slot for more than another year or two. No popular charter can.
The DC PS system oozes exclusivity as it is: middle-class taxpayers paying the bulk of property taxes in neighborhoods like Capitol Hill are effectively excluded from neighborhood schools above around 3rd grade because their children aren't challenged or pushed in such institutions (see threads about what happens in the upper grades at Two Rivers). In cities around the country run by braver and more pragmatic politicians, selective admissions in both "regular" public schools and charters are an option, keeping a far greater percentage of affluent parents, and their money and organization prowess, in the system. The losers here, where the system promotes a misguided paternalism to protect low-SES kids from competition from better-off kids, are the brightest poor kids. What Basis is saying is that we won't water down the curriculum for low-performing kids in class, we will turn them into high-performing kids via tutoring outside class instead, or watch them quietly opt along the way. Nonsense, a teacher can't teach effectively above the heads of a good portion of students in any particular class, even in the 5th, 6th and 7th grades (before those end-of-year exams kick in). The kids s/he is missing would become disruptive if that were the case. And parents of kids left behind in class would invariably storm the school complaining that their kids' needs were not being met. It was foolish to bring Basis in without a mechanism for any sort of selective admissions - a more creative administrative paradigm was needed. After perusing the various Basis posts, I still don't understand why amending the charter law and/or a DCPS-charter hybrid to set Basis up for success have been out of the question. As a practical matter, the kids entering Basis should have scored advanced on the 4th or 5th grade DC-CAS. I'm not rooting for Basis as is; I'm rooting for Basis as it should be.
Anonymous wrote:Public schools are for everyone. If you want exclusivity, then you need private or magnet. Neither of which are charters.
Sorry, them's the breaks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Vim and vigor" is quite misguided, totally on the wrong track. It's parents like me who should be doing the suing. The DC school system does not meet the needs of talented young achievers. As such, those talented and hardworking students are being "excluded" and the DC school system is therefore "not following the law" unless those needs are met. All the more reason why a school like Basis IS needed - to meet the unmet needs elsewhere in the DC system. The DC school system should be required to support those needs, by law.
Totally agree![]()
talk to the folks in central office, then who are totally focused on getting the scores of kids who are not proficient.
They are sure it can be done, irrespective of any family deficits, with the right teachers and the right evaluation system. It hasn't come close to working in five years, but still they persist.
As for BASIS - I hope it succeeds, but we must remember - it is a public school and must abide by the laws that apply to all citizens. Parents who aren't willing to or can't pay the price for private schools, can't expect laws to be bent for their children.
If the gentrifying parents sent their kids to their neighborhood schools, they'd be just as good as the ward 3 schools are right now. You don't hear ward 3 parents demanding special privileges from the public schools or demanding quality charters. They don't need them - their real estate choices are serving them well.
a.) what DCPS central office does is what DCPS central office does, and what BASIS does is what BASIS does.
b.) ALL public schools must abide by the laws, whether BASIS, DCPS, et cetera. If DCPS were abiding by the laws, and that means, meeting the needs of *all* students, regardless of whether they can or can't afford private schools, whether or not they are special needs, gifted and talented, or whatever. Clearly DCPS is not meeting that need, which is driving the huge explosion in charters. So before we go carrying on about what needs Charters are or aren't meeting, stop and go back and look at the core problem - it's DCPS. It's not about "gentrifying parents" and which schools they send their kids to. Gentrifying parents sending their kids to neighborhood schools isn't going to magically change DCPS, as everything else will just stay the same, unless change happens elsewhere also.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Vim and vigor" is quite misguided, totally on the wrong track. It's parents like me who should be doing the suing. The DC school system does not meet the needs of talented young achievers. As such, those talented and hardworking students are being "excluded" and the DC school system is therefore "not following the law" unless those needs are met. All the more reason why a school like Basis IS needed - to meet the unmet needs elsewhere in the DC system. The DC school system should be required to support those needs, by law.
Totally agree![]()
talk to the folks in central office, then who are totally focused on getting the scores of kids who are not proficient.
They are sure it can be done, irrespective of any family deficits, with the right teachers and the right evaluation system. It hasn't come close to working in five years, but still they persist.
As for BASIS - I hope it succeeds, but we must remember - it is a public school and must abide by the laws that apply to all citizens. Parents who aren't willing to or can't pay the price for private schools, can't expect laws to be bent for their children.
If the gentrifying parents sent their kids to their neighborhood schools, they'd be just as good as the ward 3 schools are right now. You don't hear ward 3 parents demanding special privileges from the public schools or demanding quality charters. They don't need them - their real estate choices are serving them well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Vim and vigor" is quite misguided, totally on the wrong track. It's parents like me who should be doing the suing. The DC school system does not meet the needs of talented young achievers. As such, those talented and hardworking students are being "excluded" and the DC school system is therefore "not following the law" unless those needs are met. All the more reason why a school like Basis IS needed - to meet the unmet needs elsewhere in the DC system. The DC school system should be required to support those needs, by law.
Totally agree![]()
Anonymous wrote:Basis isn't local to anyone. It's a charter, meaning it is subject to a citywide lottery where they must educate any child who wins a spot.
Anonymous wrote:Public schools are for everyone. If you want exclusivity, then you need private or magnet. Neither of which are charters.
Sorry, them's the breaks.