Anonymous wrote:The current HoS at BASIS just announced that he is leaving at the end of this school year to lead a different BASIS school and the current Director of Student Affairs will be replacing him as HoS next school year. This is how you know who actually attends BASIS or is genuinely interested in the school and who is just trolling…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This parent who left not long ago is pleased to hear that he's leaving himself. Call me a troll glad to hear good news during a winter when we've been short of it.
Former Basis parent here as well - I'm petty and not sad for him to go. Who is taking over? I cant remember who was student affairs director when we were there. Ms Inc? I loved her - we may not have left had I known she was coming!
Anonymous wrote:This parent who left not long ago is pleased to hear that he's leaving himself. Call me a troll glad to hear good news during a winter when we've been short of it.
Anonymous wrote:Curious to see if more or less teachers will leave with the new head of school. As a parent, I think the new one is a very bad idea due to my interactions with her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you enter hoping for more than pre-AP test prep and yAP test prep you will also be dissappointed. BASIS is a test prep program in the guise of a school. If that bothers you don’t enroll, or enroll and don’t stay for high school.
Not in our experience.
And the school’s high rankings refute your point as well.
BTW, check your spelling.
The school’s rankings are based entirely on the fact that they are a test prep program. What do you think the rankings are measuring?
-NP
Troll.
You don't understand rankings or BASIS.
https://www.usnews.com/education/k12/middle-schools/district-of-columbia
https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/district-of-columbia
Anonymous wrote:NP. I’ve had a look at the methodology USNWR goes with and it doesn’t seem relevant to my family. In a nutshell, schools where poor kids score high on state standardized tests rank high. That metric is the linchpin of rankings success. Also, USNWR isn’t tracking teacher or family satisfaction or EC quality. They aren’t penalizing schools for low student or teacher retention over time. What this means is that the phenomena of BASIS losing at least half of the entering 5th grade cohort before HS graduation and a double digit annual teacher exodus have no inpact on the program’s ranking. Goofy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you enter hoping for more than pre-AP test prep and yAP test prep you will also be dissappointed. BASIS is a test prep program in the guise of a school. If that bothers you don’t enroll, or enroll and don’t stay for high school.
Not in our experience.
And the school’s high rankings refute your point as well.
BTW, check your spelling.
The school’s rankings are based entirely on the fact that they are a test prep program. What do you think the rankings are measuring?
-NP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. When our kids were at BASIS, we got to know fellow test-in public magnet grads from big cities around the country who weren't bowled over by the education their children were receiving and weren't impressed with the school's leadership either. A few loved the place but most would they'd say that they tolerated BASIS because they couldn't afford both private MS and HS and didn't want to move from DC. These parents were mostly Federal civil servants, academics, non-profit workers or journalists. Their prevalence at BASIS helps explain substantial attrition after MS. We used our years in DCPS and BASIS to save [b]for a HS where the curriculum stresses critical thinking, creativity, inquiry, independent research, hands-on learning, [\b] the arts, advanced language work and other academic offerings not available at BASIS.
From what I’ve heard from BASIS admin, the HS experience is very different from MS, and there is a lot more of the bolded above in HS. Is that true?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you enter hoping for more than pre-AP test prep and yAP test prep you will also be dissappointed. BASIS is a test prep program in the guise of a school. If that bothers you don’t enroll, or enroll and don’t stay for high school.
Not in our experience.
And the school’s high rankings refute your point as well.
BTW, check your spelling.