Anonymous wrote:I’m not the person you’re lashing out at but I can tell you that the data on leaving BASIS for other DC public options doesn’t always provide a full picture. Take a BASIS student we know who left after 6th, allegedly for Stuart Hobson. The parents enrolled her in a DCPS program with no intention of sending her there. They didn’t want community flak for their true plan, to homeschool her for 7th. We know another family that left BASIS after 7th for Hardy, only to leave a week in after they got off a WL at a private. Hint: enrolling in by-right public schools is free and v. easy to do if you have an IB address.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post is hard to follow. We left BASIS for a suburban school in 9th grade without telling DC public where we were going. Easily done.
When you leave and don't enroll withing DCPS/PCS you show up in "Not in Audit". You seem a scary combination of ignorant and condescending.
I’m not the person you’re lashing out at but I can tell you that the data on leaving BASIS for other DC public options doesn’t always provide a full picture. Take a BASIS student we know who left after 6th, allegedly for Stuart Hobson. The parents enrolled her in a DCPS program with no intention of sending her there. They didn’t want community flak for their true plan, to homeschool her for 7th. We know another family that left BASIS after 7th for Hardy, only to leave a week in after they got off a WL at a private. Hint: enrolling in by-right public schools is free and v. easy to do if you have an IB address.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post is hard to follow. We left BASIS for a suburban school in 9th grade without telling DC public where we were going. Easily done.
When you leave and don't enroll withing DCPS/PCS you show up in "Not in Audit". You seem a scary combination of ignorant and condescending.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, so I think using enrollment audit data and the Edscape graphic here is what I pulled together.
In SY 21-22, BASIS had 129 5th graders. 115 continued to 6th grade at BASIS for SY 22-23. 89% retention.
Of 115 6th graders in SY 21-22 (it's just a coincidence that it's 115 here and also above, they aren't the same kids), 89 continued to 7th grade at BASIS for SY 22-23. 77% retention.
Of 100 7th graders, 85 continued to 8th at BASIS. 85%.
Of 92 8th graders, 78 continued to 9th at BASIS. 85%.
Of 53 9th graders, 50 continued to 10th at BASIS. 94%.
Of 65 10th graders, 63 continued to 11th-- 97%.
Of 44 11th graders, 42 continued to 12th-- 95%.
It's so interesting that the retention of 6th graders into 7th is the lowest, I was thinking 5th into 6th would be low because that's an entry year for Deal, Hardy, and Stuart-Hobson.
So, wherever you are pulling the data, the list of transfer destinations for departing 6th graders might be interesting. Lottery options seem slim for 7th grade, which could mean more tried to leave than succeeded. It would make sense for returning to home pattern to be a decent percentage since that's by right.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, so I think using enrollment audit data and the Edscape graphic here is what I pulled together.
In SY 21-22, BASIS had 129 5th graders. 115 continued to 6th grade at BASIS for SY 22-23. 89% retention.
Of 115 6th graders in SY 21-22 (it's just a coincidence that it's 115 here and also above, they aren't the same kids), 89 continued to 7th grade at BASIS for SY 22-23. 77% retention.
Of 100 7th graders, 85 continued to 8th at BASIS. 85%.
Of 92 8th graders, 78 continued to 9th at BASIS. 85%.
Of 53 9th graders, 50 continued to 10th at BASIS. 94%.
Of 65 10th graders, 63 continued to 11th-- 97%.
Of 44 11th graders, 42 continued to 12th-- 95%.
It's so interesting that the retention of 6th graders into 7th is the lowest, I was thinking 5th into 6th would be low because that's an entry year for Deal, Hardy, and Stuart-Hobson.
Anonymous wrote:Your post is hard to follow. We left BASIS for a suburban school in 9th grade without telling DC public where we were going. Easily done.
Anonymous wrote:The reality is that Basis takes 130ish kids in 5th grade, and by 12th grade is left with 40. that means 90 kids/families are leaving over the years -- a full 70%.
That attrition is actually crazy, and is a huge outlier. There is simply no other school in DC that is losing kids like that.
Anonymous wrote:The lower retention from 6th to 7th grade is likely because 6th grade is the first year of comprehensive exams. 5th grade is relatively easy and usually a great year at BASIS for many kids without the greater pressures of the later years. Families probably don’t anticipate their student doing poorly on the comprehensives and then when it happens in 6th grade, and they face the prospect of repeating a grade, they switch out for 7th grade. BASIS did accept three new 7th grade students this year seemingly because of that larger attrition from 6th to 7th grade.