Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No kid loves BASIS. Kids love fresh air, light, fun school electives supported by serious resources, a strong school community, fine performing arts programs, strong school sports programs, strong instrumental music programs, a chance to run around during the school day, a chance to go on interesting field trips on a regular basis, Parents love avoiding crappy DCPS middle schools while continuing to enjoy their hip row house lifestyle. I say this as a parent who used to proudly proclaim that my kids loved BASIS. The thing is, they didn't and neither did their friends. By 9th grade, almost the entire friend group, a dozen kids, had voted with their feet.
Ooh, found the "shame on your selfish rowhouse lifestyle" poster. You been on vacation? You're usually chiming in a little earlier on these threads.
Anyway, yeah, you got me. I secretly hate my kids and prioritize my hipness over their education. That's definitely why my kid is at BASIS rather than FCPS. Thank God people like you are posting on every single BASIS thread to show the rest of us the error of our ways.
I'm a little surprised you're not also going after those hip rowhouse parents who send their kids to Latin or DCI instead of doing the loving thing and moving to the suburbs. Or is it only selfish when our kids go to a school your child didn't like?
Anonymous wrote:No kid loves BASIS. Kids love fresh air, light, fun school electives supported by serious resources, a strong school community, fine performing arts programs, strong school sports programs, strong instrumental music programs, a chance to run around during the school day, a chance to go on interesting field trips on a regular basis, Parents love avoiding crappy DCPS middle schools while continuing to enjoy their hip row house lifestyle. I say this as a parent who used to proudly proclaim that my kids loved BASIS. The thing is, they didn't and neither did their friends. By 9th grade, almost the entire friend group, a dozen kids, had voted with their feet.
Anonymous wrote:No kid loves BASIS. Kids love fresh air, light, fun school electives supported by serious resources, a strong school community, fine performing arts programs, strong school sports programs, strong instrumental music programs, a chance to run around during the school day, a chance to go on interesting field trips on a regular basis, Parents love avoiding crappy DCPS middle schools while continuing to enjoy their hip row house lifestyle. I say this as a parent who used to proudly proclaim that my kids loved BASIS. The thing is, they didn't and neither did their friends. By 9th grade, almost the entire friend group, a dozen kids, had voted with their feet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their student retention also stinks. No other DC charter routinely loses half their families before the terminal grade.
Few other charters hold their students to real standards
Other charters operate multiple tracks to accommodate students who are working to different standards. It’s understandable that the PCSB prefers schools that take responsibility for educating all the students they enroll. Basis is as much a sorting mechanism as a school.
If DC would let them use a merit-based admissions process, I would expect to see better student retention. Until DC offers those option to the families of high-achieving students, I see BASIS upholding standards in its grade promotion as a feature, not a bug.
You've had kids at BASIS? We have and aren't buying that most families leave because the kids are held to high academic standards.
From what we could tell, most families actually leave because it's a dreary program with high teacher turnover, tin-eared leadership, a repetitive, one-size-fits all middle school curriculum (especially for sciences), weak HS ECs and a spectacularly crappy building.
We hope that the franchise fails to get permission to open a K-4 school, which would clobber the Cap Hill elementary schools after 15 years of steady, hard-won gains.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their student retention also stinks. No other DC charter routinely loses half their families before the terminal grade.
Few other charters hold their students to real standards
Other charters operate multiple tracks to accommodate students who are working to different standards. It’s understandable that the PCSB prefers schools that take responsibility for educating all the students they enroll. Basis is as much a sorting mechanism as a school.
If DC would let them use a merit-based admissions process, I would expect to see better student retention. Until DC offers those option to the families of high-achieving students, I see BASIS upholding standards in its grade promotion as a feature, not a bug.
You've had kids at BASIS? We have and aren't buying that most families leave because the kids are held to high academic standards.
From what we could tell, most families actually leave because it's a dreary program with high teacher turnover, tin-eared leadership, a repetitive, one-size-fits all middle school curriculum (especially for sciences), weak HS ECs and a spectacularly crappy building.
We hope that the franchise fails to get permission to open a K-4 school, which would clobber the Cap Hill elementary schools after 15 years of steady, hard-won gains.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their student retention also stinks. No other DC charter routinely loses half their families before the terminal grade.
Few other charters hold their students to real standards
Other charters operate multiple tracks to accommodate students who are working to different standards. It’s understandable that the PCSB prefers schools that take responsibility for educating all the students they enroll. Basis is as much a sorting mechanism as a school.
If DC would let them use a merit-based admissions process, I would expect to see better student retention. Until DC offers those option to the families of high-achieving students, I see BASIS upholding standards in its grade promotion as a feature, not a bug.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their student retention also stinks. No other DC charter routinely loses half their families before the terminal grade.
Few other charters hold their students to real standards
Other charters operate multiple tracks to accommodate students who are working to different standards. It’s understandable that the PCSB prefers schools that take responsibility for educating all the students they enroll. Basis is as much a sorting mechanism as a school.
Anonymous wrote:Does every new charter have to slowly add grades? If yes, then BASIS is no more special than anyone else and should not expect to be treated differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their student retention also stinks. No other DC charter routinely loses half their families before the terminal grade.
Few other charters hold their students to real standards
Anonymous wrote:Their student retention also stinks. No other DC charter routinely loses half their families before the terminal grade.