Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Sure, plenty of kids leave because Basis is a horrible match for them. But plenty of others leave because they want something different and/or seek out a “more perfect” school. Not because Basis isn’t a solid option. (For example, just look at the current thread contemplating Walls vs Basis).
This. Also, note that the school has only been around since 2012, is 100% lottery, admits virtually no one after 5th grade, does not do social promotion, and seems to attract more people each year. So, it is not surprising that there are more kids in the lower grades than upper grades.
If a kid leaves because of natural attrition (e.g., parents move out of area, private school, Basis is not the right fit, etc.), he or she isn’t replaced. You can’t really compare it to an in-bounds school such as Wilson with 450+ kids in the senior class.
You boosters never stop. Basis isn't "the right fit" for bright, hard-working kids because it doesn't offer a well-rounded education and isn't a very well-run or resourced school. Staff turnover remains stubbornly high, heads change with alarming frequency, extra-curriculars are thin on the ground, the middle school curriculum is inflexible and none too exciting (all those multiple choice tests and quizzes), the building is depressing etc. Basis was supposedly a great fit for my student, among the highest achievers in her cohort. We left anyway for a far richer and healthier education because we could afford to, unlike the majority of Basis families. Families gut out Basis to enjoy what comes next.
This is rich. It’s obvious PP kids went private. Some parents don’t have that luxury of choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Sure, plenty of kids leave because Basis is a horrible match for them. But plenty of others leave because they want something different and/or seek out a “more perfect” school. Not because Basis isn’t a solid option. (For example, just look at the current thread contemplating Walls vs Basis).
This. Also, note that the school has only been around since 2012, is 100% lottery, admits virtually no one after 5th grade, does not do social promotion, and seems to attract more people each year. So, it is not surprising that there are more kids in the lower grades than upper grades.
If a kid leaves because of natural attrition (e.g., parents move out of area, private school, Basis is not the right fit, etc.), he or she isn’t replaced. You can’t really compare it to an in-bounds school such as Wilson with 450+ kids in the senior class.
You boosters never stop. Basis isn't "the right fit" for bright, hard-working kids because it doesn't offer a well-rounded education and isn't a very well-run or resourced school. Staff turnover remains stubbornly high, heads change with alarming frequency, extra-curriculars are thin on the ground, the middle school curriculum is inflexible and none too exciting (all those multiple choice tests and quizzes), the building is depressing etc. Basis was supposedly a great fit for my student, among the highest achievers in her cohort. We left anyway for a far richer and healthier education because we could afford to, unlike the majority of Basis families. Families gut out Basis to enjoy what comes next.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Sure, plenty of kids leave because Basis is a horrible match for them. But plenty of others leave because they want something different and/or seek out a “more perfect” school. Not because Basis isn’t a solid option. (For example, just look at the current thread contemplating Walls vs Basis).
This. Also, note that the school has only been around since 2012, is 100% lottery, admits virtually no one after 5th grade, does not do social promotion, and seems to attract more people each year. So, it is not surprising that there are more kids in the lower grades than upper grades.
If a kid leaves because of natural attrition (e.g., parents move out of area, private school, Basis is not the right fit, etc.), he or she isn’t replaced. You can’t really compare it to an in-bounds school such as Wilson with 450+ kids in the senior class.
You boosters never stop. Basis isn't "the right fit" for bright, hard-working kids because it doesn't offer a well-rounded education and isn't a very well-run or resourced school. Staff turnover remains stubbornly high, heads change with alarming frequency, extra-curriculars are thin on the ground, the middle school curriculum is inflexible and none too exciting (all those multiple choice tests and quizzes), the building is depressing etc. Basis was supposedly a great fit for my student, among the highest achievers in her cohort. We left anyway for a far richer and healthier education because we could afford to, unlike the majority of Basis families. Families gut out Basis to enjoy what comes next.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Sure, plenty of kids leave because Basis is a horrible match for them. But plenty of others leave because they want something different and/or seek out a “more perfect” school. Not because Basis isn’t a solid option. (For example, just look at the current thread contemplating Walls vs Basis).
This. Also, note that the school has only been around since 2012, is 100% lottery, admits virtually no one after 5th grade, does not do social promotion, and seems to attract more people each year. So, it is not surprising that there are more kids in the lower grades than upper grades.
If a kid leaves because of natural attrition (e.g., parents move out of area, private school, Basis is not the right fit, etc.), he or she isn’t replaced. You can’t really compare it to an in-bounds school such as Wilson with 450+ kids in the senior class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Sure, plenty of kids leave because Basis is a horrible match for them. But plenty of others leave because they want something different and/or seek out a “more perfect” school. Not because Basis isn’t a solid option. (For example, just look at the current thread contemplating Walls vs Basis).
Anonymous wrote:NP here and high school basis parent - I agree that there is sometime rote memorization in the younger grades, but it all comes together in the ap classes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Sure, plenty of kids leave because Basis is a horrible match for them. But plenty of others leave because they want something different and/or seek out a “more perfect” school. Not because Basis isn’t a solid option. (For example, just look at the current thread contemplating Walls vs Basis).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.
Fair point. Just curious, PP, did your kid ever attend BASIS? I have heard that BASIS has gotten better compared to it's earlier years. Not sure if that's true or if it's just more self-selection (for example, I know many families that didn't lottery for BASIS this year because they didn't think it would be a good fit for their kid).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mistake to plan for Basis for 5th to 12th. More than half the families still leave along the way.
Yes, but having a Basis as a solid option through 12th sure brings my family a lot of piece of mind.
Wistful thinking. When a kid isn't doing well in a particular school emotionally and/or academically, an option no longer seems solid. Plenty of Basis families find that their kids don't thrive in the program, particularly in 7th and 8th grades. Hope that yours blossoms at Basis, but don't be caught flat-footed if they don't. Hello, they admit around 125 5th graders and graduate around 50 seniors.