Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
I bought this line, until we switched to a strong DC parochial school with a high school that's even smaller. Surprise. We've found far more flexibility, more robust course offerings and better extra curriculars at this school. The lack of flexibility is obviously more a function of weak, inexperienced admins running BASIS than size. Funding is also an issue, but the BASIS doesn't permit PTAs to fundraise and allocate funds. They permit a booster club to hand money raised over to admins. Total BS.
Shocking development! A school that charges tuition has better offerings than BASIS and DCPS.
So she says.
Sorry, Our Lady of Victory catholic school doesn’t come close to Basis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
I bought this line, until we switched to a strong DC parochial school with a high school that's even smaller. Surprise. We've found far more flexibility, more robust course offerings and better extra curriculars at this school. The lack of flexibility is obviously more a function of weak, inexperienced admins running BASIS than size. Funding is also an issue, but the BASIS doesn't permit PTAs to fundraise and allocate funds. They permit a booster club to hand money raised over to admins. Total BS.
There's a catholic high school out there with < 70 kids per graduating class that still offers 1-2 post AP Calc BC classes as well as a full load of science APs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
I bought this line, until we switched to a strong DC parochial school with a high school that's even smaller. Surprise. We've found far more flexibility, more robust course offerings and better extra curriculars at this school. The lack of flexibility is obviously more a function of weak, inexperienced admins running BASIS than size. Funding is also an issue, but the BASIS doesn't permit PTAs to fundraise and allocate funds. They permit a booster club to hand money raised over to admins. Total BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
I bought this line, until we switched to a strong DC parochial school with a high school that's even smaller. Surprise. We've found far more flexibility, more robust course offerings and better extra curriculars at this school. The lack of flexibility is obviously more a function of weak, inexperienced admins running BASIS than size. Funding is also an issue, but the BASIS doesn't permit PTAs to fundraise and allocate funds. They permit a booster club to hand money raised over to admins. Total BS.
Shocking development! A school that charges tuition has better offerings than BASIS and DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
I bought this line, until we switched to a strong DC parochial school with a high school that's even smaller. Surprise. We've found far more flexibility, more robust course offerings and better extra curriculars at this school. The lack of flexibility is obviously more a function of weak, inexperienced admins running BASIS than size. Funding is also an issue, but the BASIS doesn't permit PTAs to fundraise and allocate funds. They permit a booster club to hand money raised over to admins. Total BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
This thread started with a bunch of posters claiming no kids take Calc in 8th grade. But you said your kid did. So why is it so crazy for people to think some of these very accelerated kids didn’t pass the AP exam? (Not claiming your kid didn’t, just think posters here claim they know exactly what happens with every kid at Basis are wrong).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
The most advanced BASIS kids, like mine, take Calc AB in 8th and Calc BC in 9th. Yes, he could have easily learned all of the BC material in 8th. We don't mind, though. Very few other schools would have allowed that level of acceleration, even if the kid is entirely capable.
To some extent, we accept that BASIS is a one-size-fits-all school with relatively little flexibility. The school is too small to be anything else. If you want a lot of flexibility, course offerings, extracurriculars, etc., then a large public school would be a better fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
Your comments are nothing but clutter. Basis isn’t TJ or Bronx Science. It has never claimed to be. And nothing in DC ever could be. DC is far too small. (Seriously. The total high school population of DC is only 10x the size of TJ.) And DC is far too close to TJ. People who feel as you do about the need for ultra-extreme math acceleration have long since moved to Virginia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
Your comments are nothing but clutter. Basis isn’t TJ or Bronx Science. It has never claimed to be. And nothing in DC ever could be. DC is far too small. (Seriously. The total high school population of DC is only 10x the size of TJ.) And DC is far too close to TJ. People who feel as you do about the need for ultra-extreme math acceleration have long since moved to Virginia.
Nope.
DC has around 47,000 high school students.
TJ has about 2000 students.
My friend, you may want to check your math. There were just over 13k HIGH SCHOOL students in SY 22/23. https://dcps.dc.gov/page/dcps-glance-enrollment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
Your comments are nothing but clutter. Basis isn’t TJ or Bronx Science. It has never claimed to be. And nothing in DC ever could be. DC is far too small. (Seriously. The total high school population of DC is only 10x the size of TJ.) And DC is far too close to TJ. People who feel as you do about the need for ultra-extreme math acceleration have long since moved to Virginia.
Nope.
DC has around 47,000 high school students.
TJ has about 2000 students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.
Your comments are nothing but clutter. Basis isn’t TJ or Bronx Science. It has never claimed to be. And nothing in DC ever could be. DC is far too small. (Seriously. The total high school population of DC is only 10x the size of TJ.) And DC is far too close to TJ. People who feel as you do about the need for ultra-extreme math acceleration have long since moved to Virginia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inconvenient truth is that elite STEM high schools in this country don't compel their top students to take AB and BC as a sequence. That's not the way things work at TJ in Fairfax, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Talented and Gifted Dallas, top privates like Andover and Exeter etc. BASIS isn't a franchise run by educators, which sometimes shows. And they wonder why they don't get more than 1 or 2 grads to Ivies and elite tech programs like MIT and Cal Tech annually.
BASIS is not an elite STEM high school like the list of schools you provided. A kid destined for the Ivies or MIT is not going to be stopped because they took the AB the BC calculus sequence at BASIS.
Come back and complain / criticize once BASIS becomes a top test in HS. Till then, please stop criticizing it.
I'll criticize what I like; you do the same. The sequence is a waste of time for the most advanced math students who could readily learn AB content in BC calc. That's how calc has generally been taught in the strongest high schools around the country for two generations.
We had students in the BASIS middle school, so we know how their admins preaches the gospel of the franchise running elite STEM programs, to its to try to entice the most capable students to stay for HS. We also know how BASIS favors one-size-fits-all academic options that have a way of bogging down their most advanced students in elite college admissions. BASIS could aim higher for a particularly math savvy subset of high school students, but doesn't bother.