Anonymous wrote:8th graders who leave will be replaced next year (for funding purposes) by another big class of 5th graders.Anonymous wrote:They're really going to keep most of the 8th graders back a grade? As the parent of a 5th grader, it looks to me like few are the types to pass the comprehensive exams (hint: they spend half the day screaming, and pushing and tripping one another). Come on, they're stuck with most of these kids because they need the money that follows them to run the school, and can't replace them with students who could handle the curriculum because of the ban on screening applicants.
Anonymous wrote:^Sure, there are kids with GT potential in DCPS and DC Charter, hundreds and possibly thousands of them. But somewhere between K and 9th grade, the great majority depart to the burbs or privates, including low-SES kids given scholarships. Those who remain probably aren't in the best situation. Parents of 4th and 5th graders in one of the half dozen centers for the highly gifted in MoCo can attest to the difference between the curriculum for "advanced learners" in their neighborhood schools and those for truly gifted kids at these centers.
In AZ, apparently, few leave public schools and the BASIS campuses offer better facilities than here. The DC amenities are so lean that many high-SES parents will surely leave for HS in search of playing fields, media centers, gyms, auditoriums etc. even if the academics look promising. What we can probably expect on the SAT front is what you see at Wilson, a small number of students, nearly all high-SES, scoring 2000+ while average scores are much lower. Without selective admissions, as at Bronx Science and TJ, you can't do better than that. As my grandmother would have put it, you can't put in what God left out...
Although I attended a mediocre HS where average SAT scores hovered close to the national average, I scored 750+ on both sections. I've loved to read as a kid, and had some good math teachers. The test presents no great hurdles for the highly motivated, wherever they study.
8th graders who leave will be replaced next year (for funding purposes) by another big class of 5th graders.Anonymous wrote:They're really going to keep most of the 8th graders back a grade? As the parent of a 5th grader, it looks to me like few are the types to pass the comprehensive exams (hint: they spend half the day screaming, and pushing and tripping one another). Come on, they're stuck with most of these kids because they need the money that follows them to run the school, and can't replace them with students who could handle the curriculum because of the ban on screening applicants.
Anonymous wrote:PP has a good point. Good intentions aside, can Basis can duplicate their success (even in part) to create an environment favorable to learning for kids that have high/very high potential in DC?
Objectively, Basis’s scores/track record shows that the Basis orgnization has the knowhow needed to put together an environment favorable to learning at the very highest level. On the numbers, Newsweek has an internet list of the 1000 best high schools in the US that includes SAT scores. (The link is provided below - the site takes a while to load). Once it comes up, you can sort by SAT score. Basis Scottsdale (SAT 1951) is 32th and Tucson (SAT 1932) is 42nd place. By comparison, Bronx High School of Science (SAT 2010) is 16th and Thomas Jefferson (SAT 2200) is 3rd, but both are selective. Also, an 1800 average SAT score would be about 200th on the list and 1900 would be 77th. In perspective, there are about 42,000 high schools in the US. (Digest of Education Statistics 2011 June 2012). That would put Basis Tucson in the top 0.1% or one in a thousand.
But will Basis can duplicate their success in DC, sufficently to keep high performing DC kids? From what I understand about the Basis approach, they teach 5th graders, 5th and 6th grade subject matter. 6th graders get 7th and 8th grade subject matter, and so on. If kids don’t pass, they are left behind a grade. If they implement this model and then expel kids that are violent&mean, what’s to stop them?
Basis may be the underdog. We’ll see what happens. If Latin tried and did not succeed, was it because the Latin organization did not have the past perfomace/knowhow?
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/05/20/america-s-best-high-schools.html