Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
She is a great asset for BASIS as a college counselor and I am happy to see her in that role.
When do BASIS students get access to a college counselor? Hearing great things about BASIS from parent after parent -- none who know each other & all just coincidence (in fact, one friend is in Arizona). But, my major concern is that there doesn't seem to be many families from the 16th Street Heights area -- everyone I know is coming from SE. I am leaning toward a school that attracts more local families so that my child will have friends nearby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
She is a great asset for BASIS as a college counselor and I am happy to see her in that role.
She's very smart and pleasant but not experienced or trained, no National Association of College Counselors certification in her background. Good luck to her and you.
I think you mean NACAC. Their $99 online, 50-hour training certification doesn't impress me as much as you.
She will be successful, as will the kids, for several reasons. First, BASIS already has a reputation / brand among college admissions counselors of producing very prepared high school graduates. Second, she knows the students deeply having taught most of them for 2-3 years.
The only downside of putting her in that role, was that it removed her from the classroom, where she was highly effective. But I'm not sure she was ever going to be a lifelong chemistry teacher regardless. I'm grateful she still has an important role and close relationship with my DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
She is a great asset for BASIS as a college counselor and I am happy to see her in that role.
She's very smart and pleasant but not experienced or trained, no National Association of College Counselors certification in her background. Good luck to her and you.
Anonymous wrote:not pp but another former parent.
BASIS uses the survival of the fittest model, with the fittest not necessarily being the smartest or most hard working. A student can get really good grades all year long; however 2 exams January precomp and June comp/final test) count for 60% of the entire year. So when admin wants to get rid of a student, they just give an F for the final exam and The A's becomes a C- and the B's becomes a D. And there have been several cases of large discrepancies in the grades given by teachers and marks in the report cards. I understand grade manipulation happens in many schools, but not to this extend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
She is a great asset for BASIS as a college counselor and I am happy to see her in that role.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Former BASIS parent, promoting teachers to administration without them possessing the requisite qualifications to do the new job or without considering the impact on the impact on the students in the classroom, is SOP at Basis. Promotions there seem to be run like a high school popularity contest.
Another former parent. I knew two former teachers well enough that they confided that their departures were prompted by what they felt was fundamental unfairness with the way the administration treated students.
Anonymous wrote:Former BASIS parent, promoting teachers to administration without them possessing the requisite qualifications to do the new job or without considering the impact on the impact on the students in the classroom, is SOP at Basis. Promotions there seem to be run like a high school popularity contest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
She is a great asset for BASIS as a college counselor and I am happy to see her in that role.
When do BASIS students get access to a college counselor? Hearing great things about BASIS from parent after parent -- none who know each other & all just coincidence (in fact, one friend is in Arizona). But, my major concern is that there doesn't seem to be many families from the 16th Street Heights area -- everyone I know is coming from SE. I am leaning toward a school that attracts more local families so that my child will have friends nearby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
She is a great asset for BASIS as a college counselor and I am happy to see her in that role.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
The Dean of Students would fall into this category as well. Amateurish and unprofessional is what I have experienced so far.
We have experienced the opposite with this person, and if you look at his schooling/experience prior to Basis, his promotion into that particular role made a LOT of sense, especially considering what his predecessor was like!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, like the fantastic chemistry teacher who suddenly became college counselor without having done course work in advising, or ever working as a college counselor.
The Dean of Students would fall into this category as well. Amateurish and unprofessional is what I have experienced so far.