Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do we know how many kids — in raw numbers — have enrolled in 9th for next year? Did I hear correctly on a recent townhall that it’s about 90 kids? Or am I mistaken?
Whoa 90 staying? That must be a record!
Anonymous wrote:What are the factors causing more students to stay for high school? Did BASIS address past problems and improve in ways that students/parents find more appealing? Or does it have to do with other school options now somehow being less desirable than previously? What schools were BASIS MS students often switching to for HS previously? Or a combination of factors or other factors causing increased popularity in the high school?
Anonymous wrote:Do we know how many kids — in raw numbers — have enrolled in 9th for next year? Did I hear correctly on a recent townhall that it’s about 90 kids? Or am I mistaken?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but the counselor isn’t a powerful player in the not so subtle BASIS game to weed out academic stragglers, starting after 6th grade comp results come out. If admins and teachers want your kid gone, the counselor can’t necessarily do much to help.
What PP means is, their kid couldn't hack it academically and when they failed their comps and were told they needed to repeat the grade (which they are always able to do) because Basis won't socially promote, PP got mad, moved their kid and started blaming everyone but themselves. Apparently it is the counselor's fault their kid couldn't hack it. Now, even removed from that experience, PP can't acknowledge their parenting failure because the knew damn well, as do all Basis families, that there is a comp exam every year starting in 6th.
Psycho babble nonsense, PP. I posted about the counselor's role.
My kid made 90s Club from the get go and passed comps before moving on to a different HS. A few of classmates failed comps, were instructed to repeat a grade to stay, then left. These kids weren't treated well by admins before their families bailed, which I considered shameful. Admins want no more than around 50% of the MS students back for HS. That's the BASIS franchise's model wherever they operate.
Anonymous wrote:Since there is apparently a trend for more students to remain at BASIS for HS, I am wondering would the school actually consider moving to a larger space or would they sooner decrease the size of the incoming 5th grade class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The PP was just being sarcastic.
Some parent who stayed at Basis was complaining about the school but bragging that his/her kid was selected to a college that only admits in the single digits. Gee, it sounds like maybe your kid actually did obtain a good education at Basis...
You can put this in the same category as the posters who bash Basis but also claim that there kid was a straight A student, took Calc BC in 8th grade, and the like.
If you don't like the school, just go elsewhere. And then tout your kids' supposed genius in some other thread. Plenty of students at Basis are happy there.
Why don't you tout your unduly idealistic view of BASIS DC elsewhere? Make no mistake, there's an undeniable Hobbesian undercurrent to the program, one celebrated by some of the happy families. Search Thomas Hobbes, English philosopher, 1651 Leviathan to get up to speed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but the counselor isn’t a powerful player in the not so subtle BASIS game to weed out academic stragglers, starting after 6th grade comp results come out. If admins and teachers want your kid gone, the counselor can’t necessarily do much to help.
What PP means is, their kid couldn't hack it academically and when they failed their comps and were told they needed to repeat the grade (which they are always able to do) because Basis won't socially promote, PP got mad, moved their kid and started blaming everyone but themselves. Apparently it is the counselor's fault their kid couldn't hack it. Now, even removed from that experience, PP can't acknowledge their parenting failure because the knew damn well, as do all Basis families, that there is a comp exam every year starting in 6th.
Psycho babble nonsense, PP. I posted about the counselor's role.
My kid made 90s Club from the get go and passed comps before moving on to a different HS. A few of classmates failed comps, were instructed to repeat a grade to stay, then left. These kids weren't treated well by admins before their families bailed, which I considered shameful. Admins want no more than around 50% of the MS students back for HS. That's the BASIS franchise's model wherever they operate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: A few of classmates failed comps, were instructed to repeat a grade to stay, then left. These kids weren't treated well by admins before their families bailed, which I considered shameful. Admins want no more than around 50% of the MS students back for HS. That's the BASIS franchise's model wherever they operate.
It's not that admins want high attrition. They want a highly rigorous school. To achieve that, you can either have an entrance exam which selects the students academically capable, or you can let everyone try the school, but have high attrition. The moment you have to have a lottery rather than an admissions test, you're going to end up with a bunch of kids who aren't bright enough or motivated enough to handle a rigorous school.
Anonymous wrote: A few of classmates failed comps, were instructed to repeat a grade to stay, then left. These kids weren't treated well by admins before their families bailed, which I considered shameful. Admins want no more than around 50% of the MS students back for HS. That's the BASIS franchise's model wherever they operate.
Anonymous wrote:The PP was just being sarcastic.
Some parent who stayed at Basis was complaining about the school but bragging that his/her kid was selected to a college that only admits in the single digits. Gee, it sounds like maybe your kid actually did obtain a good education at Basis...
You can put this in the same category as the posters who bash Basis but also claim that there kid was a straight A student, took Calc BC in 8th grade, and the like.
If you don't like the school, just go elsewhere. And then tout your kids' supposed genius in some other thread. Plenty of students at Basis are happy there.
Anonymous wrote:The PP was just being sarcastic.
Some parent who stayed at Basis was complaining about the school but bragging that his/her kid was selected to a college that only admits in the single digits. Gee, it sounds like maybe your kid actually did obtain a good education at Basis...
You can put this in the same category as the posters who bash Basis but also claim that there kid was a straight A student, took Calc BC in 8th grade, and the like.
If you don't like the school, just go elsewhere. And then tout your kids' supposed genius in some other thread. Plenty of students at Basis are happy there.