Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
Um, not in Fairfax, MoCo or Arlington, not in well-run suburban systems aiming high in college admissions. The open-minded former BASIS HoS would have worked with you. This guy wears his insecurities on his sleeve by controlling whatever he can. Glad you could afford to leave to stay on track for an Ivy.
The current HOH is a big reason we are leaving for Private for HS. He makes no changes, blows off parent concerns, does nothing to try and control classroom behavior. My child has gotten excellent grades - and honestly if Basis followed through on the curriculum as it was designed (as opposed to being months behind the AZ campuses), she would really thrive more and maybe we would stay. But the teaching quality has been hit or miss, admin is clueless and prides themselves on dragging along kids who are in over their heads and probably shouldn't be at Basis rather than being an environment where advanced children can thrive.
We could have written this post. We're fed up with rowdy middle school classes. My sibling has teens at the original Arizona campus and their school is simply much better. The campus has good facilities and a serious performing arts program. Teens can play in a first-rate school orchestra. They can take languages past the AP level and advanced humanities classes from 7th grade. A different world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
I mean - BASIS Science Olympiad team just went to Kansas City this past weekend for some event so . . . . ?
They went to the Science Olympiad National Tournament and competed against schools like TJ and Langley. Considering that both those schools have over 1k students and BASIS has only 200 in its high school (and is a lottery school), I think BASIS did pretty well.
https://www.soinc.org/2023-national-tournament
https://www.soinc.org/sites/default/files/uploaded_files/Final_SONT_23_Division_C_Results_by_Rank.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Most UMC kids in DC come from donut home families. Elite private colleges are unaffordable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
Um, not in Fairfax, MoCo or Arlington, not in well-run suburban systems aiming high in college admissions. The open-minded former BASIS HoS would have worked with you. This guy wears his insecurities on his sleeve by controlling whatever he can. Glad you could afford to leave to stay on track for an Ivy.
The current HOH is a big reason we are leaving for Private for HS. He makes no changes, blows off parent concerns, does nothing to try and control classroom behavior. My child has gotten excellent grades - and honestly if Basis followed through on the curriculum as it was designed (as opposed to being months behind the AZ campuses), she would really thrive more and maybe we would stay. But the teaching quality has been hit or miss, admin is clueless and prides themselves on dragging along kids who are in over their heads and probably shouldn't be at Basis rather than being an environment where advanced children can thrive.
Anonymous wrote:Most UMC kids in DC come from donut home families. Elite private colleges are unaffordable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
Um, not in Fairfax, MoCo or Arlington, not in well-run suburban systems aiming high in college admissions. The open-minded former BASIS HoS would have worked with you. This guy wears his insecurities on his sleeve by controlling whatever he can. Glad you could afford to leave to stay on track for an Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:. Caltech is v. impressive but not one Ivy, or Stanford or MIT. Hopkins undergrad is just OK. Sorry, not impressed with this year’s admissions results. I blame increasingly uneven teaching and leadership with tunnel vision.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
I mean - BASIS Science Olympiad team just went to Kansas City this past weekend for some event so . . . . ?
School sponsored Olympiad event, planned long in advance for a group. PP isn't wrong that individual competitors tend to be out of luck at BASIS under this HoS and that seniors don't tend to knock it of the park on ECs because they've been too busy taking all their AP exams by spring of junior year. I'm hoping that some lessons will be learned from underwhelming admissions results this year (NYU, Smith, Middlebury, who could ask for anything more?). Probably not.
?? There are also students going to Johns Hopkins and Caltech. I wonder why you didn't mention those?
. Caltech is v. impressive but not one Ivy, or Stanford or MIT. Hopkins undergrad is just OK. Sorry, not impressed with this year’s admissions results. I blame increasingly uneven teaching and leadership with tunnel vision.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
I mean - BASIS Science Olympiad team just went to Kansas City this past weekend for some event so . . . . ?
School sponsored Olympiad event, planned long in advance for a group. PP isn't wrong that individual competitors tend to be out of luck at BASIS under this HoS and that seniors don't tend to knock it of the park on ECs because they've been too busy taking all their AP exams by spring of junior year. I'm hoping that some lessons will be learned from underwhelming admissions results this year (NYU, Smith, Middlebury, who could ask for anything more?). Probably not.
?? There are also students going to Johns Hopkins and Caltech. I wonder why you didn't mention those?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
I mean - BASIS Science Olympiad team just went to Kansas City this past weekend for some event so . . . . ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got the critical flexibility and support we needed to pursue post AP language, performance music and STEM competition success (involving some travel on school days) from SJC. At BASIS, when we would ask admins for a little flexibility in middle school and 9th grade the answer was invariably, no. Too many barriers for our kid to stand out in college admissions down the road.
Sounds like private school was the right choice for you. It’s harder for a public school to violate policies like you were asking. TBH, except for post AP language, for the others I would have just done it and waited for someone to tell me no. As long as your kid keeps up in class and you don’t push absences past 10 days or whatever, there’s a lot you can get away with.
I mean - BASIS Science Olympiad team just went to Kansas City this past weekend for some event so . . . . ?
School sponsored Olympiad event, planned long in advance for a group. PP isn't wrong that individual competitors tend to be out of luck at BASIS under this HoS and that seniors don't tend to knock it of the park on ECs because they've been too busy taking all their AP exams by spring of junior year. I'm hoping that some lessons will be learned from underwhelming admissions results this year (NYU, Smith, Middlebury, who could ask for anything more?). Probably not.