Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? DCPS high schools have trouble with the credibility of BASIS grades? Is this the same DCPS that has failed to meet the needs of the majority of students in the District for decades?
You have no idea. I spoke with a DCPS Central Office employee who informed me the College Board doesn't allow 8th graders to take AP Courses.
Anonymous wrote:Huh? DCPS high schools have trouble with the credibility of BASIS grades? Is this the same DCPS that has failed to meet the needs of the majority of students in the District for decades?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? DCPS high schools have trouble with the credibility of BASIS grades? Is this the same DCPS that has failed to meet the needs of the majority of students in the District for decades?
Got that right. Or the same DCPS who graduates many students who are illiterate in reading and math let alone anything else.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Huh? DCPS high schools have trouble with the credibility of BASIS grades? Is this the same DCPS that has failed to meet the needs of the majority of students in the District for decades?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It appears as though there are 2 sets of rules, one for kids from DCPS MS and one for kids from Charter MS. BASIS kids, [b]unlike kids from other charters are singled out and made to take proficiency exams[/b] to be exempt from Algebra I, Algebra II and or geometry.
Why? Because high schools schools have a problem with the credibility of BASIS DC grades.
There are students who totally deserve their grades.
There are also other students whose grades are being manipulated at the middle school and the high school levels. Some students have the tests in advance, others have their grades inflated or deflated after being submitted by the teachers.
Once the current junior class (including the protégé of the data administrator), things might change.
My kid is in his 4th year at BASIS and he has busted his chops for his good grades. I know of no instances where grades were being manipulated at all especially since there are tons of objectives measures and rubrics used for the overwhelming majority of a student's grade unlike other schools where just being in class is a big part of your grade. Oh, and my kid when he has failed to do an assignment has gotten the expected F as outlined in the syllabus. It is all very clearly spelled out in each syllabus.
Anonymous wrote:It appears as though there are 2 sets of rules, one for kids from DCPS MS and one for kids from Charter MS. BASIS kids, [b]unlike kids from other charters are singled out and made to take proficiency exams[/b] to be exempt from Algebra I, Algebra II and or geometry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is not true. My DC had credits for Spanish, went into spanish 4, and into Algebra 2...so maybe 4 credits or 3.5 going into Wilson from DealAnonymous wrote:
It is an antiquated DCPS policy that only allows 2 credits to be transferred from middle school, one in a world language and one in Algebra I.
Your child may have gone into Spanish 4, but they were only able to TRANSFER in 1 credit of Spanish, not the 3 credits that they have actually taken.
Anonymous wrote:I wish them luck, but this mismatch is a factor in several schools. I was hoping to send DC to Banneker from a bilingual school, and was advised that they'd be placed in the first level of foreign language regardless of proficiencyAnonymous wrote:This sounds like an obvious issue for the 30-member DCPS-charter Cross-Sector Task Force to iron out.
I hope that BASIS parents, teachers and admins raise the HS credits transfer, and curricular mismatch, issues with the Force. If kids leaving BASIS after 8th grade really have to repeat World History at Walls, after earning 4s and 5s on the AP test, something is screwy and needs to be sorted out.
I am in the same situation as pp, but am almost positive DC had 3.5 credits on her transcript. She graduated last year thoughAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is not true. My DC had credits for Spanish, went into spanish 4, and into Algebra 2...so maybe 4 credits or 3.5 going into Wilson from DealAnonymous wrote:
It is an antiquated DCPS policy that only allows 2 credits to be transferred from middle school, one in a world language and one in Algebra I.
Your child may have gone into Spanish 4, but they were only able to TRANSFER in 1 credit of Spanish, not the 3 credits that they have actually taken.
Anonymous wrote:this is not true. My DC had credits for Spanish, went into spanish 4, and into Algebra 2...so maybe 4 credits or 3.5 going into Wilson from DealAnonymous wrote:
It is an antiquated DCPS policy that only allows 2 credits to be transferred from middle school, one in a world language and one in Algebra I.
I wish them luck, but this mismatch is a factor in several schools. I was hoping to send DC to Banneker from a bilingual school, and was advised that they'd be placed in the first level of foreign language regardless of proficiencyAnonymous wrote:This sounds like an obvious issue for the 30-member DCPS-charter Cross-Sector Task Force to iron out.
I hope that BASIS parents, teachers and admins raise the HS credits transfer, and curricular mismatch, issues with the Force. If kids leaving BASIS after 8th grade really have to repeat World History at Walls, after earning 4s and 5s on the AP test, something is screwy and needs to be sorted out.
this is not true. My DC had credits for Spanish, went into spanish 4, and into Algebra 2...so maybe 4 credits or 3.5 going into Wilson from DealAnonymous wrote:
It is an antiquated DCPS policy that only allows 2 credits to be transferred from middle school, one in a world language and one in Algebra I.