Anonymous wrote:Awesome is a stretch. Running without facilities, experienced coaches or a competitive program gets old for talented and driven kids who want more than a little fresh air, friendship and exercise on the National Mall. If you want serious extra curriculars, be prepared to foot the bill and do the legwork. If you want your MS or HS student to do Yale Certanum classics competitions, for example, be prepared to shoulder full costs for travel to competitions. Kids represent Basis for this and that competition without the school footing any of the bill. Before you enroll, you should know that Basis just isn't serious about extra curriculars and that parent input on the subject is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Awesome is a stretch. Running without facilities, experienced coaches or a competitive program gets old for talented and driven kids who want more than a little fresh air, friendship and exercise on the National Mall. If you want serious extra curriculars, be prepared to foot the bill and do the legwork. If you want your MS or HS student to do Yale Certanum classics competitions, for example, be prepared to shoulder full costs for travel to competitions. Kids represent Basis for this and that competition without the school footing any of the bill. Before you enroll, you should know that Basis just isn't serious about extra curriculars and that parent input on the subject is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Is it really necessary to cancel outside activities? My kid does a sport fairly seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Is it really necessary to cancel outside activities? My kid does a sport fairly seriously.
My kid is in 5th grade there and he continued his sport both in fall and now spring, as did lots of his friends. It's not necessary to cancel outside activities.
Yes, but dealing with outside activities gets old even if the kid can handle the time commitment, especially if both parents have demanding commutes. You start to envy families with serious sports, music and other extra curriculars at a school, whatever type of school.
Weak extra curricular options are one reason the Basis loses half of it students between 6th and 9th grades. Everybody who leaves doesn't do it because the academics are too much, or their life circumstances change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Is it really necessary to cancel outside activities? My kid does a sport fairly seriously.
My kid is in 5th grade there and he continued his sport both in fall and now spring, as did lots of his friends. It's not necessary to cancel outside activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Is it really necessary to cancel outside activities? My kid does a sport fairly seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Is it really necessary to cancel outside activities? My kid does a sport fairly seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Is it really necessary to cancel outside activities? My kid does a sport fairly seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Is it really necessary to cancel outside activities? My kid does a sport fairly seriously.
Anonymous wrote:My child loves it there. It was a steep learning curve. We needed to cancel outside activities and really prioritize giving her time to do work as she started. No more taking her out to long dinners with friends on weeknights. By 6th grade, she had lots of extracurriculars again. Other than that, basis did the work to get her up to speed.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve been at Basis long enough to advise that half the battle is to accept that it’s a very strange school. Love Basis or hate it, it’s just not a remotely normal school. Preparing your family mentally for the weirdness of BASIS is in fact answering the question. That’s the reality of the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Circumstances, divorce. BASIS for 5th, 6th for eldest. Kid did very well academically but not socially/emotionally or with extra curriculars (mostly music). Ex moved to Arlington; we share custody. Comprehensive middle school with big campus, strong music program, advanced languages etc. Writing classes much better- 15 students max, much more experienced teacher. STEM subjects not quite as challenging but never mind. Good luck at BASIS.