Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree, and we'd have taken a spot at Latin Cooper if we'd had the chance. But Latin wait lists lengthen year on year. In 2022, Latin Cooper had around 75 names on its WL at the start of school. In 2023, more than 250 names.
Keep applying every year. I know kids that switched from BASIS to Latin in middle school, as well as kids who went to Latin for high school from BASIS.
Never heard of anyone switching to Latin from Basis.
What years are you talking about? Is this from 10 years ago or something?
Last year, Basis transfers to DC publics only included Walls, Duke, and Coolidge, which is pretty typical. Latin also lost students to Coolidge too.
10 schools sent kids to Latin for 9th grade, including Deal and Hardy. Zero kids came from Basis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, BASIS isn't alone. Charters that don't tolerate transparent parent organizations empowered to make their own expenditure decisions aren't for every family seeking academic rigor for strong students. We left BASIS because we didn't care for the spirit of the place and could afford parochial high school. Surprisingly, the new school, run by clergy, offers a much freer environment. If you can't afford to leave BASIS and want to stay in the city, you put up with what you have to.
You wanna tell us more about transparency and parental input at a school RUN BY THE CHURCH? You are one special human.
Also, lookey what we have here. Another poster whose thesis appears to to be "BASIS wasn't that good....so we had to go private."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree, and we'd have taken a spot at Latin Cooper if we'd had the chance. But Latin wait lists lengthen year on year. In 2022, Latin Cooper had around 75 names on its WL at the start of school. In 2023, more than 250 names.
Keep applying every year. I know kids that switched from BASIS to Latin in middle school, as well as kids who went to Latin for high school from BASIS.
Anonymous wrote:Right, BASIS isn't alone. Charters that don't tolerate transparent parent organizations empowered to make their own expenditure decisions aren't for every family seeking academic rigor for strong students. We left BASIS because we didn't care for the spirit of the place and could afford parochial high school. Surprisingly, the new school, run by clergy, offers a much freer environment. If you can't afford to leave BASIS and want to stay in the city, you put up with what you have to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want a school that has academic rigor plus happiness, go to Latin.
Based on Latin’s test scores, it’s not that rigorous.
But having experienced BASIS with a high achieving child, I absolutely believe it’s a better environment, so if I had the chance, I would switch.
Agree that Latin is not that rigorous, particularly in math, where there is no differentiation and th highest level they can get to is AB Calc. But it does seem way happier and strong in reading/writing/humanities. We have it in our list, but not Basis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree, and we'd have taken a spot at Latin Cooper if we'd had the chance. But Latin wait lists lengthen year on year. In 2022, Latin Cooper had around 75 names on its WL at the start of school. In 2023, more than 250 names.
Keep applying every year. I know kids that switched from BASIS to Latin in middle school, as well as kids who went to Latin for high school from BASIS.
Anonymous wrote:If you want a school that has academic rigor plus happiness, go to Latin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want a school that has academic rigor plus happiness, go to Latin.
Based on Latin’s test scores, it’s not that rigorous.
But having experienced BASIS with a high achieving child, I absolutely believe it’s a better environment, so if I had the chance, I would switch.
Anonymous wrote:If you want a school that has academic rigor plus happiness, go to Latin.
Anonymous wrote:Agree, and we'd have taken a spot at Latin Cooper if we'd had the chance. But Latin wait lists lengthen year on year. In 2022, Latin Cooper had around 75 names on its WL at the start of school. In 2023, more than 250 names.