Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just heard it from a parent there. They HATE it.
The parent hates Basis and is suing the school? To what end - what does the lawsuit entail?
Were they forced at gunpoint to attend Basis?
Jesus. I'm just shaking my head.
There's a waitlist of families three digits deep that would absolutely love to take their place at Basis right now.
Exactly. If you don't like it, find another school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They also want to reach underserved students.
With the caveat that the underserved students are able to handle accelerated work. If your child is below grade level, BASIS offers remediation for them to catch up but the student needs to put in the work.
Sending your child to a middle/high school that is known for an accelerated curriculum and then complaining about the fact that the curriculum is accelerated makes you an idiot.
And yet, you'd still be not as big an idiot as the charter school parent who believes that a charter school doesn't have an obligation to serve every single child who comes through the doors, AND serve them all equally well. Every. single. child. Equally. well.
It's not hard, it's the law.
![]()
Not at all true. It is not the law. Equal access, yes. Equal opportunity, yes. Accommodation, yes. Those are law.
Everyone gets an A, no. Sorry. Everyone gets a free pass to the next grade, no. Sorry. Neither of those are law.
Nice strawman, bug eyes. FAPE doesn't demand that everyone gets an A. It does demand that everyone receives the accommodations, and services, and supports necessary to access the curriculum. So if Johnny or Jamal or Juanito can't take Calculus when he's 10, you don't get to keep holding him back until he's 14 in the hope that he drops out. You have to provide a math curriculum he can access. Even if it means you have to offer 5th grade math.
Nice trolling, troll. They just can't discriminate, and have to provide support. There is no assumption that every child can achieve the same results with some fixed amount of support.
If that were the case, every DCPS school would be up the creek, because they aren't making material accessible enough. Ergo, your logic is completely, utterly fried.
Nice trying, fool. There's no assumption in the law that every child achieve the save outcome. Again, this is really simple. The legal requirement is that the school provide FAPE.
(Btw, DCPS has been up the creek for a couple of decades. It's the reason they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars to send students to private schools. You're an idiot to not know this.)
FAPE comes from The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act - it only applies to students with documented disabilities. AND note Free Appropriate Public Education in FAPE. Is someone has an IQ of 50, a school like BASIS is not appropriate nor does BASIS have to provide accommodation. The student will be given a more appropriate placement at a school that can meet their needs.
In a nutshell, that's why BASIS is being sued. It is an LEA and receives taxpayer funding. Those funds are attached to the legal obligation to provide FAPE. "A school like Basis is not appropriate nor does Basis have to provide accommodation" is wishful-thinking at best (for someone who desires a private school but can't afford it) but more likely flagrant offenses against federal law. In any event it's the statement of someone who is obviously ignorant - not merely of the law itself, but also how the legal process works.
It's going to be fun watching Basis be torn apart.
Tell us the truth, PP. What is your wait list number at BASIS? How many people will you have to scare away to get in?
Oh I have no problem with telling the truth: we're not at Basis, have not applied, and never will. I know much too much to involve my family here. This isn't personal for me, it's more like religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They also want to reach underserved students.
With the caveat that the underserved students are able to handle accelerated work. If your child is below grade level, BASIS offers remediation for them to catch up but the student needs to put in the work.
Sending your child to a middle/high school that is known for an accelerated curriculum and then complaining about the fact that the curriculum is accelerated makes you an idiot.
And yet, you'd still be not as big an idiot as the charter school parent who believes that a charter school doesn't have an obligation to serve every single child who comes through the doors, AND serve them all equally well. Every. single. child. Equally. well.
It's not hard, it's the law.
![]()
Not at all true. It is not the law. Equal access, yes. Equal opportunity, yes. Accommodation, yes. Those are law.
Everyone gets an A, no. Sorry. Everyone gets a free pass to the next grade, no. Sorry. Neither of those are law.
Nice strawman, bug eyes. FAPE doesn't demand that everyone gets an A. It does demand that everyone receives the accommodations, and services, and supports necessary to access the curriculum. So if Johnny or Jamal or Juanito can't take Calculus when he's 10, you don't get to keep holding him back until he's 14 in the hope that he drops out. You have to provide a math curriculum he can access. Even if it means you have to offer 5th grade math.
Nice trolling, troll. They just can't discriminate, and have to provide support. There is no assumption that every child can achieve the same results with some fixed amount of support.
If that were the case, every DCPS school would be up the creek, because they aren't making material accessible enough. Ergo, your logic is completely, utterly fried.
Nice trying, fool. There's no assumption in the law that every child achieve the save outcome. Again, this is really simple. The legal requirement is that the school provide FAPE.
(Btw, DCPS has been up the creek for a couple of decades. It's the reason they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars to send students to private schools. You're an idiot to not know this.)
FAPE comes from The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act - it only applies to students with documented disabilities. AND note Free Appropriate Public Education in FAPE. Is someone has an IQ of 50, a school like BASIS is not appropriate nor does BASIS have to provide accommodation. The student will be given a more appropriate placement at a school that can meet their needs.
In a nutshell, that's why BASIS is being sued. It is an LEA and receives taxpayer funding. Those funds are attached to the legal obligation to provide FAPE. "A school like Basis is not appropriate nor does Basis have to provide accommodation" is wishful-thinking at best (for someone who desires a private school but can't afford it) but more likely flagrant offenses against federal law. In any event it's the statement of someone who is obviously ignorant - not merely of the law itself, but also how the legal process works.
It's going to be fun watching Basis be torn apart.
Tell us the truth, PP. What is your wait list number at BASIS? How many people will you have to scare away to get in?
Oh I have no problem with telling the truth: we're not at Basis, have not applied, and never will. I know much too much to involve my family here. This isn't personal for me, it's more like religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They also want to reach underserved students.
With the caveat that the underserved students are able to handle accelerated work. If your child is below grade level, BASIS offers remediation for them to catch up but the student needs to put in the work.
Sending your child to a middle/high school that is known for an accelerated curriculum and then complaining about the fact that the curriculum is accelerated makes you an idiot.
And yet, you'd still be not as big an idiot as the charter school parent who believes that a charter school doesn't have an obligation to serve every single child who comes through the doors, AND serve them all equally well. Every. single. child. Equally. well.
It's not hard, it's the law.
![]()
Not at all true. It is not the law. Equal access, yes. Equal opportunity, yes. Accommodation, yes. Those are law.
Everyone gets an A, no. Sorry. Everyone gets a free pass to the next grade, no. Sorry. Neither of those are law.
Nice strawman, bug eyes. FAPE doesn't demand that everyone gets an A. It does demand that everyone receives the accommodations, and services, and supports necessary to access the curriculum. So if Johnny or Jamal or Juanito can't take Calculus when he's 10, you don't get to keep holding him back until he's 14 in the hope that he drops out. You have to provide a math curriculum he can access. Even if it means you have to offer 5th grade math.
Nice trolling, troll. They just can't discriminate, and have to provide support. There is no assumption that every child can achieve the same results with some fixed amount of support.
If that were the case, every DCPS school would be up the creek, because they aren't making material accessible enough. Ergo, your logic is completely, utterly fried.
Nice trying, fool. There's no assumption in the law that every child achieve the save outcome. Again, this is really simple. The legal requirement is that the school provide FAPE.
(Btw, DCPS has been up the creek for a couple of decades. It's the reason they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars to send students to private schools. You're an idiot to not know this.)
FAPE comes from The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act - it only applies to students with documented disabilities. AND note Free Appropriate Public Education in FAPE. Is someone has an IQ of 50, a school like BASIS is not appropriate nor does BASIS have to provide accommodation. The student will be given a more appropriate placement at a school that can meet their needs.
In a nutshell, that's why BASIS is being sued. It is an LEA and receives taxpayer funding. Those funds are attached to the legal obligation to provide FAPE. "A school like Basis is not appropriate nor does Basis have to provide accommodation" is wishful-thinking at best (for someone who desires a private school but can't afford it) but more likely flagrant offenses against federal law. In any event it's the statement of someone who is obviously ignorant - not merely of the law itself, but also how the legal process works.
It's going to be fun watching Basis be torn apart.
Tell us the truth, PP. What is your wait list number at BASIS? How many people will you have to scare away to get in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They also want to reach underserved students.
With the caveat that the underserved students are able to handle accelerated work. If your child is below grade level, BASIS offers remediation for them to catch up but the student needs to put in the work.
Sending your child to a middle/high school that is known for an accelerated curriculum and then complaining about the fact that the curriculum is accelerated makes you an idiot.
And yet, you'd still be not as big an idiot as the charter school parent who believes that a charter school doesn't have an obligation to serve every single child who comes through the doors, AND serve them all equally well. Every. single. child. Equally. well.
It's not hard, it's the law.
![]()
Not at all true. It is not the law. Equal access, yes. Equal opportunity, yes. Accommodation, yes. Those are law.
Everyone gets an A, no. Sorry. Everyone gets a free pass to the next grade, no. Sorry. Neither of those are law.
Nice strawman, bug eyes. FAPE doesn't demand that everyone gets an A. It does demand that everyone receives the accommodations, and services, and supports necessary to access the curriculum. So if Johnny or Jamal or Juanito can't take Calculus when he's 10, you don't get to keep holding him back until he's 14 in the hope that he drops out. You have to provide a math curriculum he can access. Even if it means you have to offer 5th grade math.
Nice trolling, troll. They just can't discriminate, and have to provide support. There is no assumption that every child can achieve the same results with some fixed amount of support.
If that were the case, every DCPS school would be up the creek, because they aren't making material accessible enough. Ergo, your logic is completely, utterly fried.
Nice trying, fool. There's no assumption in the law that every child achieve the save outcome. Again, this is really simple. The legal requirement is that the school provide FAPE.
(Btw, DCPS has been up the creek for a couple of decades. It's the reason they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars to send students to private schools. You're an idiot to not know this.)
FAPE comes from The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act - it only applies to students with documented disabilities. AND note Free Appropriate Public Education in FAPE. Is someone has an IQ of 50, a school like BASIS is not appropriate nor does BASIS have to provide accommodation. The student will be given a more appropriate placement at a school that can meet their needs.
In a nutshell, that's why BASIS is being sued. It is an LEA and receives taxpayer funding. Those funds are attached to the legal obligation to provide FAPE. "A school like Basis is not appropriate nor does Basis have to provide accommodation" is wishful-thinking at best (for someone who desires a private school but can't afford it) but more likely flagrant offenses against federal law. In any event it's the statement of someone who is obviously ignorant - not merely of the law itself, but also how the legal process works.
It's going to be fun watching Basis be torn apart.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone provided documentation of where DC BASIS is being sued?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Johnny, Jamal and Juanito can all have 5th grade math served over and over and over. Just because they won't do the work because it's served by The Man isn't a reason for a lawsuit.
Failure to fully understand IDEA is very expensive. Just ask DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They also want to reach underserved students.
With the caveat that the underserved students are able to handle accelerated work. If your child is below grade level, BASIS offers remediation for them to catch up but the student needs to put in the work.
Sending your child to a middle/high school that is known for an accelerated curriculum and then complaining about the fact that the curriculum is accelerated makes you an idiot.
And yet, you'd still be not as big an idiot as the charter school parent who believes that a charter school doesn't have an obligation to serve every single child who comes through the doors, AND serve them all equally well. Every. single. child. Equally. well.
It's not hard, it's the law.
![]()
Not at all true. It is not the law. Equal access, yes. Equal opportunity, yes. Accommodation, yes. Those are law.
Everyone gets an A, no. Sorry. Everyone gets a free pass to the next grade, no. Sorry. Neither of those are law.
Nice strawman, bug eyes. FAPE doesn't demand that everyone gets an A. It does demand that everyone receives the accommodations, and services, and supports necessary to access the curriculum. So if Johnny or Jamal or Juanito can't take Calculus when he's 10, you don't get to keep holding him back until he's 14 in the hope that he drops out. You have to provide a math curriculum he can access. Even if it means you have to offer 5th grade math.
Nice trolling, troll. They just can't discriminate, and have to provide support. There is no assumption that every child can achieve the same results with some fixed amount of support.
If that were the case, every DCPS school would be up the creek, because they aren't making material accessible enough. Ergo, your logic is completely, utterly fried.
Nice trying, fool. There's no assumption in the law that every child achieve the save outcome. Again, this is really simple. The legal requirement is that the school provide FAPE.
(Btw, DCPS has been up the creek for a couple of decades. It's the reason they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars to send students to private schools. You're an idiot to not know this.)
FAPE comes from The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act - it only applies to students with documented disabilities. AND note Free Appropriate Public Education in FAPE. Is someone has an IQ of 50, a school like BASIS is not appropriate nor does BASIS have to provide accommodation. The student will be given a more appropriate placement at a school that can meet their needs.

Anonymous wrote:Johnny, Jamal and Juanito can all have 5th grade math served over and over and over. Just because they won't do the work because it's served by The Man isn't a reason for a lawsuit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They also want to reach underserved students.
With the caveat that the underserved students are able to handle accelerated work. If your child is below grade level, BASIS offers remediation for them to catch up but the student needs to put in the work.
Sending your child to a middle/high school that is known for an accelerated curriculum and then complaining about the fact that the curriculum is accelerated makes you an idiot.
And yet, you'd still be not as big an idiot as the charter school parent who believes that a charter school doesn't have an obligation to serve every single child who comes through the doors, AND serve them all equally well. Every. single. child. Equally. well.
It's not hard, it's the law.
![]()
Not at all true. It is not the law. Equal access, yes. Equal opportunity, yes. Accommodation, yes. Those are law.
Everyone gets an A, no. Sorry. Everyone gets a free pass to the next grade, no. Sorry. Neither of those are law.
Nice strawman, bug eyes. FAPE doesn't demand that everyone gets an A. It does demand that everyone receives the accommodations, and services, and supports necessary to access the curriculum. So if Johnny or Jamal or Juanito can't take Calculus when he's 10, you don't get to keep holding him back until he's 14 in the hope that he drops out. You have to provide a math curriculum he can access. Even if it means you have to offer 5th grade math.
Nice trolling, troll. They just can't discriminate, and have to provide support. There is no assumption that every child can achieve the same results with some fixed amount of support.
If that were the case, every DCPS school would be up the creek, because they aren't making material accessible enough. Ergo, your logic is completely, utterly fried.
Nice trying, fool. There's no assumption in the law that every child achieve the save outcome. Again, this is really simple. The legal requirement is that the school provide FAPE.
(Btw, DCPS has been up the creek for a couple of decades. It's the reason they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars to send students to private schools. You're an idiot to not know this.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They also want to reach underserved students.
With the caveat that the underserved students are able to handle accelerated work. If your child is below grade level, BASIS offers remediation for them to catch up but the student needs to put in the work.
Sending your child to a middle/high school that is known for an accelerated curriculum and then complaining about the fact that the curriculum is accelerated makes you an idiot.
And yet, you'd still be not as big an idiot as the charter school parent who believes that a charter school doesn't have an obligation to serve every single child who comes through the doors, AND serve them all equally well. Every. single. child. Equally. well.
It's not hard, it's the law.
![]()
Not at all true. It is not the law. Equal access, yes. Equal opportunity, yes. Accommodation, yes. Those are law.
Everyone gets an A, no. Sorry. Everyone gets a free pass to the next grade, no. Sorry. Neither of those are law.
Nice strawman, bug eyes. FAPE doesn't demand that everyone gets an A. It does demand that everyone receives the accommodations, and services, and supports necessary to access the curriculum. So if Johnny or Jamal or Juanito can't take Calculus when he's 10, you don't get to keep holding him back until he's 14 in the hope that he drops out. You have to provide a math curriculum he can access. Even if it means you have to offer 5th grade math.
Nice trolling, troll. They just can't discriminate, and have to provide support. There is no assumption that every child can achieve the same results with some fixed amount of support.
If that were the case, every DCPS school would be up the creek, because they aren't making material accessible enough. Ergo, your logic is completely, utterly fried.