Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin and Basis are so wildly different that I'm not understanding how parents could think both schools could be a great fit for their kid.
Come on, most parents who enroll don't think these schools are a "great fit" for their kids. BASIS has crappy facilities and high teacher turnover and Latin's facilities aren't great. Neither school has the dough to offer first-rate extra curriculars/enrichment, especially for 5th graders. Neither school tracks for humanities subjects in middle school, other than Latin for kids who start Latin after 5th grade.
Kids go to Latin and BASIS not so much because either is a "great fit," but because middle-class Hill families East of Rock Creek lack viable middle school options. Plenty of BASIS families would have sent their children to the original Latin if they could have. It works the other way, too, but not to the same extent.
Depends on the kid.
Latin's academics are subpar. BASIS families looking for a "normal" school with subpar academics might have been hoping for Latin and just not have gotten in through the lottery. Most of them have moved on to other schools long ago.
The BASIS families still around by 9th grade that we know do think that the school is a "great fit."
Not buying it. The BASIS families we've known for many years who are still around from 9th grade+ talk about staying on in the program as preferable to moving to the burbs of paying for privates. BASIS doesn't have strong enough ECs, leadership or teaching (too much turnover) to be a "great fit" for much of anybody. Parents who can pay for serious HS ECs do. BASIS does the job, not more.
Seriously, no one cares what you think.
Speak for yourself. We care. We've enrolled to hedge our bets because we've got a crappy ib middle school. I could easily see us moving for 6th.
Yah, great doesn't seem to be the operative word. The parent community doesn't seem welcoming (is there a parent community?) and the principal and building don't impress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin and Basis are so wildly different that I'm not understanding how parents could think both schools could be a great fit for their kid.
Come on, most parents who enroll don't think these schools are a "great fit" for their kids. BASIS has crappy facilities and high teacher turnover and Latin's facilities aren't great. Neither school has the dough to offer first-rate extra curriculars/enrichment, especially for 5th graders. Neither school tracks for humanities subjects in middle school, other than Latin for kids who start Latin after 5th grade.
Kids go to Latin and BASIS not so much because either is a "great fit," but because middle-class Hill families East of Rock Creek lack viable middle school options. Plenty of BASIS families would have sent their children to the original Latin if they could have. It works the other way, too, but not to the same extent.
Depends on the kid.
Latin's academics are subpar. BASIS families looking for a "normal" school with subpar academics might have been hoping for Latin and just not have gotten in through the lottery. Most of them have moved on to other schools long ago.
The BASIS families still around by 9th grade that we know do think that the school is a "great fit."
Not buying it. The BASIS families we've known for many years who are still around from 9th grade+ talk about staying on in the program as preferable to moving to the burbs of paying for privates. BASIS doesn't have strong enough ECs, leadership or teaching (too much turnover) to be a "great fit" for much of anybody. Parents who can pay for serious HS ECs do. BASIS does the job, not more.
Seriously, no one cares what you think.
Speak for yourself. We care. We've enrolled to hedge our bets because we've got a crappy ib middle school. I could easily see us moving for 6th.
Yah, great doesn't seem to be the operative word. The parent community doesn't seem welcoming (is there a parent community?) and the principal and building don't impress.
You should start looking to move now, because 5th grade is going to be rough for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin and Basis are so wildly different that I'm not understanding how parents could think both schools could be a great fit for their kid.
Come on, most parents who enroll don't think these schools are a "great fit" for their kids. BASIS has crappy facilities and high teacher turnover and Latin's facilities aren't great. Neither school has the dough to offer first-rate extra curriculars/enrichment, especially for 5th graders. Neither school tracks for humanities subjects in middle school, other than Latin for kids who start Latin after 5th grade.
Kids go to Latin and BASIS not so much because either is a "great fit," but because middle-class Hill families East of Rock Creek lack viable middle school options. Plenty of BASIS families would have sent their children to the original Latin if they could have. It works the other way, too, but not to the same extent.
Depends on the kid.
Latin's academics are subpar. BASIS families looking for a "normal" school with subpar academics might have been hoping for Latin and just not have gotten in through the lottery. Most of them have moved on to other schools long ago.
The BASIS families still around by 9th grade that we know do think that the school is a "great fit."
Not buying it. The BASIS families we've known for many years who are still around from 9th grade+ talk about staying on in the program as preferable to moving to the burbs of paying for privates. BASIS doesn't have strong enough ECs, leadership or teaching (too much turnover) to be a "great fit" for much of anybody. Parents who can pay for serious HS ECs do. BASIS does the job, not more.
Seriously, no one cares what you think.
Speak for yourself. We care. We've enrolled to hedge our bets because we've got a crappy ib middle school. I could easily see us moving for 6th.
Yah, great doesn't seem to be the operative word. The parent community doesn't seem welcoming (is there a parent community?) and the principal and building don't impress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin and Basis are so wildly different that I'm not understanding how parents could think both schools could be a great fit for their kid.
Come on, most parents who enroll don't think these schools are a "great fit" for their kids. BASIS has crappy facilities and high teacher turnover and Latin's facilities aren't great. Neither school has the dough to offer first-rate extra curriculars/enrichment, especially for 5th graders. Neither school tracks for humanities subjects in middle school, other than Latin for kids who start Latin after 5th grade.
Kids go to Latin and BASIS not so much because either is a "great fit," but because middle-class Hill families East of Rock Creek lack viable middle school options. Plenty of BASIS families would have sent their children to the original Latin if they could have. It works the other way, too, but not to the same extent.
Depends on the kid.
Latin's academics are subpar. BASIS families looking for a "normal" school with subpar academics might have been hoping for Latin and just not have gotten in through the lottery. Most of them have moved on to other schools long ago.
The BASIS families still around by 9th grade that we know do think that the school is a "great fit."
Not buying it. The BASIS families we've known for many years who are still around from 9th grade+ talk about staying on in the program as preferable to moving to the burbs of paying for privates. BASIS doesn't have strong enough ECs, leadership or teaching (too much turnover) to be a "great fit" for much of anybody. Parents who can pay for serious HS ECs do. BASIS does the job, not more.
Seriously, no one cares what you think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot depends on where this school is located. If it's downtown, I'm not interested in taking a kindergartner on the metro to school everyday if I can walk to an ES on the Hill.
May not be convenient for you but a lot of parents work downtown and would be very interested in dropping kids off at a downtown location. I can walk to work from BASIS's main building.
Really? Then why are so many downtown buildings empty?
Do you not understand the phrase "a lot"?
Vacancy rate in downtown DC for Q4 2022 was 17.33%. That means that 82.67% of buildings are occupied. And that percentage has and will continue to increase.
Sure, there is a lot more vacancy than there used to be (and rents/real estate prices have gone down somewhat) but a lot of people (including a lot of Basis parents) work downtown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin and Basis are so wildly different that I'm not understanding how parents could think both schools could be a great fit for their kid.
Come on, most parents who enroll don't think these schools are a "great fit" for their kids. BASIS has crappy facilities and high teacher turnover and Latin's facilities aren't great. Neither school has the dough to offer first-rate extra curriculars/enrichment, especially for 5th graders. Neither school tracks for humanities subjects in middle school, other than Latin for kids who start Latin after 5th grade.
Kids go to Latin and BASIS not so much because either is a "great fit," but because middle-class Hill families East of Rock Creek lack viable middle school options. Plenty of BASIS families would have sent their children to the original Latin if they could have. It works the other way, too, but not to the same extent.
Depends on the kid.
Latin's academics are subpar. BASIS families looking for a "normal" school with subpar academics might have been hoping for Latin and just not have gotten in through the lottery. Most of them have moved on to other schools long ago.
The BASIS families still around by 9th grade that we know do think that the school is a "great fit."
Not buying it. The BASIS families we've known for many years who are still around from 9th grade+ talk about staying on in the program as preferable to moving to the burbs of paying for privates. BASIS doesn't have strong enough ECs, leadership or teaching (too much turnover) to be a "great fit" for much of anybody. Parents who can pay for serious HS ECs do. BASIS does the job, not more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin and Basis are so wildly different that I'm not understanding how parents could think both schools could be a great fit for their kid.
Come on, most parents who enroll don't think these schools are a "great fit" for their kids. BASIS has crappy facilities and high teacher turnover and Latin's facilities aren't great. Neither school has the dough to offer first-rate extra curriculars/enrichment, especially for 5th graders. Neither school tracks for humanities subjects in middle school, other than Latin for kids who start Latin after 5th grade.
Kids go to Latin and BASIS not so much because either is a "great fit," but because middle-class Hill families East of Rock Creek lack viable middle school options. Plenty of BASIS families would have sent their children to the original Latin if they could have. It works the other way, too, but not to the same extent.
Depends on the kid.
Latin's academics are subpar. BASIS families looking for a "normal" school with subpar academics might have been hoping for Latin and just not have gotten in through the lottery. Most of them have moved on to other schools long ago.
The BASIS families still around by 9th grade that we know do think that the school is a "great fit."
Not buying it. The BASIS families we've known for many years who are still around from 9th grade+ talk about staying on in the program as preferable to moving to the burbs of paying for privates. BASIS doesn't have strong enough ECs, leadership or teaching (too much turnover) to be a "great fit" for much of anybody. Parents who can pay for serious HS ECs do. BASIS does the job, not more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot depends on where this school is located. If it's downtown, I'm not interested in taking a kindergartner on the metro to school everyday if I can walk to an ES on the Hill.
May not be convenient for you but a lot of parents work downtown and would be very interested in dropping kids off at a downtown location. I can walk to work from BASIS's main building.
Really? Then why are so many downtown buildings empty?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot depends on where this school is located. If it's downtown, I'm not interested in taking a kindergartner on the metro to school everyday if I can walk to an ES on the Hill.
Just a guess - BASIS will take advantage of the real estate deals on empty office buildings in downtown and add the k-4 (or possibly k-5) grades in the new building. I think a lot of the success of BASIS is the proximity to metro access and they will try to keep it centrally located near the existing building. Thus, I would expect to see another downtown location - in which I ask, where's the outdoor space? Expect rooftop playground proposals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot depends on where this school is located. If it's downtown, I'm not interested in taking a kindergartner on the metro to school everyday if I can walk to an ES on the Hill.
May not be convenient for you but a lot of parents work downtown and would be very interested in dropping kids off at a downtown location. I can walk to work from BASIS's main building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin and Basis are so wildly different that I'm not understanding how parents could think both schools could be a great fit for their kid.
Come on, most parents who enroll don't think these schools are a "great fit" for their kids. BASIS has crappy facilities and high teacher turnover and Latin's facilities aren't great. Neither school has the dough to offer first-rate extra curriculars/enrichment, especially for 5th graders. Neither school tracks for humanities subjects in middle school, other than Latin for kids who start Latin after 5th grade.
Kids go to Latin and BASIS not so much because either is a "great fit," but because middle-class Hill families East of Rock Creek lack viable middle school options. Plenty of BASIS families would have sent their children to the original Latin if they could have. It works the other way, too, but not to the same extent.
Depends on the kid.
Latin's academics are subpar. BASIS families looking for a "normal" school with subpar academics might have been hoping for Latin and just not have gotten in through the lottery. Most of them have moved on to other schools long ago.
The BASIS families still around by 9th grade that we know do think that the school is a "great fit."
Not buying it. The BASIS families we've known for many years who are still around from 9th grade+ talk about staying on in the program as preferable to moving to the burbs of paying for privates. BASIS doesn't have strong enough ECs, leadership or teaching (too much turnover) to be a "great fit" for much of anybody. Parents who can pay for serious HS ECs do. BASIS does the job, not more.