Anonymous wrote:I find all of this really worrisome. I was holding out hope that Basis could work for my child, but the school just seems so extreme. My son does well in all school subjects and is particularly good at math. He loves learning and always asks for extra work because he thinks it's fun. I worry that Basis will suck the life and the love of learning right out of him. 3 hours of homework every night at age 10? That is sheer craziness, and any reasonable person knows it. Of course I want him to stay ahead in math, but I absolutely do not want him taking AP Calculus as an 8th grader. Why would I want him to take a college-readiness course when he's 13? There's plenty of time for that in high school. I want him to excel in math & science while also having excellent courses in history, literature, and the arts, and time to write for the school newspaper, play sports (even travel sports!), play in the band/orchestra, etc.
Can't we have a middle school--aside from Deal, which isn't accessible to most of us--that offers some acceleration for kids in certain subjects AND other excellent classes and extra-curriculars that allow them to develop as people, while not expecting them to jump on this insane roller coaster of AP classes for 12- and 13-year-olds? Why is everything all or nothing in this town?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually PP was right. While in 2014-15 there was one group of students who took a class called LEAP Chemistry instead of regular 8th grade Chemistry, that was not an option for 2015-16.
All students were going to be required to take regular 8th grade chemistry and they could have taken an additional LEAP Chemistry class as an elective. It was a BASIS network-wide decision, not a BASIS DC decision. And in the end, no 8th graders decided to do that.
I know a few 8th graders who wanted to take both, if that was the only way to get LEAP, but in the end, BASIS DC decided not to have the class.
Assuming you are the parent of a current child, seems like a great issue to bring up at the 12/1 meeting with the CEO.
Why? what's done is done and it can't be changed. Just means that AP Physics probably won't happen for my student, which combined with the the lighter workload this year, may be blessings in disguise. Generally very happy with the the quality of instruction and don't see the point bellyaching over every little decision not made by polling the parents. They have been doing his for years and I trust that BASIS has a game plan.
Plus, what has the bellyaching gotten anyone?
Anonymous wrote:Actually PP was right. While in 2014-15 there was one group of students who took a class called LEAP Chemistry instead of regular 8th grade Chemistry, that was not an option for 2015-16.
All students were going to be required to take regular 8th grade chemistry and they could have taken an additional LEAP Chemistry class as an elective. It was a BASIS network-wide decision, not a BASIS DC decision. And in the end, no 8th graders decided to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually PP was right. While in 2014-15 there was one group of students who took a class called LEAP Chemistry instead of regular 8th grade Chemistry, that was not an option for 2015-16.
All students were going to be required to take regular 8th grade chemistry and they could have taken an additional LEAP Chemistry class as an elective. It was a BASIS network-wide decision, not a BASIS DC decision. And in the end, no 8th graders decided to do that.
I know a few 8th graders who wanted to take both, if that was the only way to get LEAP, but in the end, BASIS DC decided not to have the class.
Assuming you are the parent of a current child, seems like a great issue to bring up at the 12/1 meeting with the CEO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually PP was right. While in 2014-15 there was one group of students who took a class called LEAP Chemistry instead of regular 8th grade Chemistry, that was not an option for 2015-16.
All students were going to be required to take regular 8th grade chemistry and they could have taken an additional LEAP Chemistry class as an elective. It was a BASIS network-wide decision, not a BASIS DC decision. And in the end, no 8th graders decided to do that.
I know a few 8th graders who wanted to take both, if that was the only way to get LEAP, but in the end, BASIS DC decided not to have the class.
Anonymous wrote:Actually PP was right. While in 2014-15 there was one group of students who took a class called LEAP Chemistry instead of regular 8th grade Chemistry, that was not an option for 2015-16.
All students were going to be required to take regular 8th grade chemistry and they could have taken an additional LEAP Chemistry class as an elective. It was a BASIS network-wide decision, not a BASIS DC decision. And in the end, no 8th graders decided to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This was largely due to scheduling more than anything else. As for the LEAP section not being present, there were too few kids left over to have that section.
No dear the question is why there is no LEAP section in the 8th grade not the 9th grade (agreed too many of them left after 8th grade - is that typical of BASIS schools?), and why you would make kids who had been in LEAP Chem in 8th then have to show up at 7:45 to take AP Chem. These are the real questions.
Once we really start departing from the BASIS model you have to keep your eyes wide open, especially if you are (as we were) impressed by 5th and 6th grade.
And if you have a kid who is basically pure STEM or pure liberal arts you have to remember that in high school they are required to take six APs not of their choosing - unlike Wilson, unlike Latin, unlike any other school I know of, 3 in math/science and 3 in English/US Gov't/foreign language? NOT a good fit for anyone except for a well rounded kid.
And most kids who are really good at one thing are not well rounded.
No skin in the game, no kids there anymore, over and out.
Just warning those of you with unhappy unchallenged 9th graders and those counting on the lower school as paying your dues with high school as the great reward to seriously reevaluate whether it is worth an unhappy teenager taking APs that they know will be factored into their grade that are either required or poorly taught.
Middle school OTOH offers the best education available in my experience.
I believe there is no LEAP Chemistry this year for 8th grade is because BASIS was only offering it at 7:45 am and changed it so that the kids had to take LEAP Chem 5 days a week along with regular Chem 3 days a week. Our kid was interested but he did not want to get up for a 7:45 am class. I suspect others felt the same way because I think there was more than enough kids to do it. I was not too happy with the change. It was a dumb move on the part of BASIS to actually discourage kids with ridiculous scheduling from taking LEAP Chemistry IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This was largely due to scheduling more than anything else. As for the LEAP section not being present, there were too few kids left over to have that section.
No dear the question is why there is no LEAP section in the 8th grade not the 9th grade (agreed too many of them left after 8th grade - is that typical of BASIS schools?), and why you would make kids who had been in LEAP Chem in 8th then have to show up at 7:45 to take AP Chem. These are the real questions.
Once we really start departing from the BASIS model you have to keep your eyes wide open, especially if you are (as we were) impressed by 5th and 6th grade.
And if you have a kid who is basically pure STEM or pure liberal arts you have to remember that in high school they are required to take six APs not of their choosing - unlike Wilson, unlike Latin, unlike any other school I know of, 3 in math/science and 3 in English/US Gov't/foreign language? NOT a good fit for anyone except for a well rounded kid.
And most kids who are really good at one thing are not well rounded.
No skin in the game, no kids there anymore, over and out.
Just warning those of you with unhappy unchallenged 9th graders and those counting on the lower school as paying your dues with high school as the great reward to seriously reevaluate whether it is worth an unhappy teenager taking APs that they know will be factored into their grade that are either required or poorly taught.
Middle school OTOH offers the best education available in my experience.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you PPs. I think you have educated all of us on DCUM who frequent the DC public schools board. Perhaps you can make some flyers and start distributing them to children and parents outside the school next week.
Or, perhaps, you could do something productive.
Thank you PPs. I think you have educated all of us on DCUM who frequent the DC public schools board. Perhaps you can make some flyers and start distributing them to children and parents outside the school next week.
Please read the articles posted at the bottom in their entirety for the sake of your childrenAnonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, advice from DCUM for BASIS parents is to watch your children like a hawk so that they don't go into a depressive spiral, and even if they aren't spiraling in a way you can tell, they are probably just holding it in until they crack and wither under the pressure
Feel free to post sarcastic responses. Nevertheless, my BASIS student has reported multiple instances of suicidal ideation among classmates in the past year.
Is it the age, or is it the environment?
These kids are not seriously thinking about committing suicide, you are all overreacting incredibly.
I really hope that if your child tries to engage you on this topic, you will keep an open mind and a closed mouth until you figure out the key issues - does your child have a plan etc............
When you son at BASIS talks about walking out onto a highway so that he can be hit by a car, come back and talk to me seriously.....
I don't see how homework and a high course load causes thoughts of suicide. Depression, maybe, but not suicide.
You are wrong. Do you have teenagers? They are NOT FULLY developed adults, with adult reasoning and ideation.
http://www.npr.org/2015/05/10/405694832/in-palo-altos-high-pressure-schools-suicides-lead-to-soul-searching
[url]
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/after-woodson-high-suicides-a-search-for-solace-and-answers/2014/04/11/8dd2a3b4-7f1d-11e5-b575-d8dcfedb4ea1_story.html[/url]
http://onpoint.wbur.org/2015/05/04/teen-suicides-palo-alto-south-dakota-pressure