Anonymous wrote:I always wonder about the people who complain about the BASIS building/facilities but then say they want to send their kid to SWW. Doesn't that school also lack access to gym/fields/auditorium, etc? Or am I mistaken?
Anonymous wrote:Super happy kid at Basis. She doesn't care about the school building being what it is. When she arrives to school, it's school, regardless if you or I think it looks like and feels like an office building. To our kid, it feels like school, and she loves it.
I mean, sometimes she has gym and eats lunch on the National Mall just like two blocks away and that far surpasses whatever field or grassy area might be missing from Basis.
Also, the location of Basis is amazing being sandwiched between the Portrait Gallery and the National Archives building.
So no, Basis doesn't have a typical suburban-type school campus, but look where it's located?!
For some kids, they may need a more traditional school campus with grass and a playground, but our kid loves the location and is thriving at Basis.
And please, if you send your kid to Basis, you know that the school is an office building, so don't then post complaints that it's in an office building.
Anonymous wrote:I checked out BASIS years ago for my kid and had an immediate, viscerally negative reaction. But each to their own - some families love it!
Anonymous wrote:Wait doesn't all DCPS do tests?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way some are describing BASIS here makes it sound like... KIPP for math kids.
Here's how someone described KIPP elsewhere "discipline, structure, rigidity, conformation. It’s long school days and focus primarily is academics at the expense/exclusion of sports, extracurriculars, etc... "
Would that fit BASIS? I'm concerned. My high-achieving kids are conforming and academics-focused enough. We need Robin Williams.
Someone tell me there is creativity, positivity, art there.
Just getting to know the school as a first year family. It does seem like there are creative assignments. Like creating your own civilization/ society. Or creating your own mythological creatures. There is memorization - like eventually they memorize the periodic table. My kid is loving it & feels challenged & cared for. It is important that he get him physical activity outside of school though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way some are describing BASIS here makes it sound like... KIPP for math kids.
Here's how someone described KIPP elsewhere "discipline, structure, rigidity, conformation. It’s long school days and focus primarily is academics at the expense/exclusion of sports, extracurriculars, etc... "
Would that fit BASIS? I'm concerned. My high-achieving kids are conforming and academics-focused enough. We need Robin Williams.
Someone tell me there is creativity, positivity, art there.
Just getting to know the school as a first year family. It does seem like there are creative assignments. Like creating your own civilization/ society. Or creating your own mythological creatures. There is memorization - like eventually they memorize the periodic table. My kid is loving it & feels challenged & cared for. It is important that he get him physical activity outside of school though.
Anonymous wrote:I checked out BASIS years ago for my kid and had an immediate, viscerally negative reaction. But each to their own - some families love it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Come on, how much joy of learning is there to be had in that joyless building? There isn't even a library or a tree.
Or a stage. Also, I'm from Virginia.
Yes, the building stinks, but you have to be pretty shallow to think that a tree and a building make for joyful learning.
All I know is that my kid is super happy to go to school every day and appears to be learning a lot. Not sure what else I would want for him.
Anonymous wrote:The way some are describing BASIS here makes it sound like... KIPP for math kids.
Here's how someone described KIPP elsewhere "discipline, structure, rigidity, conformation. It’s long school days and focus primarily is academics at the expense/exclusion of sports, extracurriculars, etc... "
Would that fit BASIS? I'm concerned. My high-achieving kids are conforming and academics-focused enough. We need Robin Williams.
Someone tell me there is creativity, positivity, art there.