Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AFTER BASIS DC had to settle with OCR here rather expensively for their conduct towards IEP students the year they opened in DC, this is what they did at their teacher training elsewhere - I guess it really is the BASIS Block Ponzi scheme - but you would think they would stop being so openly arrogant and stupid about it.....
"Hello, I just wanted to share this and see what type of response I can get. I am involved in an on going complaint I filed against BASIS ed. with the Office of Civil Rights for openly stating to myself as well as numerous other educators at their July 2014 teacher training that they DO NOT and WILL NOT modify their curriculum for students with disabilities. Since the OCR accepted and took on my complaint, BASIS has come to a settlement agreement (please be sure to understand that they are not admitting to fault or guilt) with the OCR and have been placed on a series of OCR monitored trainings and changes to their core policies in regard to the no modification policy they trained me on including section 504 and how it relates to special education. My OCR attorney has asked if I would like to start a class action law suit against BASIS, however their needs to be 100 or more families with students that have been discriminated against by BASIS either while enrolled or during the process of enrollment (e.g. being told they will not modify their curriculum for a student). Please email me if you are interested. I will be keeping a running total of interested parties and sending out periodic emails to keep everyone posted as to how many people actually are interested. I will send out an email about every 3-4 weeks. Also, forward my email to anyone that could have possibly had this happen to their child or children. Please lets take a stand against an institution that openly trained employees to refuse modifications to students with disabilities.
Best,
Deborah Graham
dgraham222002@gmail.com"
I have mixed feelings on this. On one hand they should attempt to reach each student, on the other hand YOU don't have to send your kid there., Everyone knows its a tough school and as a parent you need to find the right fit for your kid. Its an accelerated school (and we need more of those in DC quite frankly) so why did expect it be different for your kid? the City does not require you to send your kid to school at Basis.
Also, NO public school modifies curriculum for students with disabilities (e.g. changes what is required for graduation or 'waters down' classes). Further Common Core standards apply to all students and kids with disabilities are expected to make progress toward them.
What schools are required to do under the law are provide accommodations or support, and sometimes modified instruction, that enables students with disabilities to access the curriculum.
Year 1 at BASIS was a mess in terms of accommodations, ignorance and paperwork for students with disabilities. I think it was due to incompetence and stupidity -- not a conspiracy theory.
Year 2 they then hired a very strong director of special education who advocates tireless and effectively for the kids with learning disabilities and things improved dramatically. She is still there 3 years later. My kid is still there, doing well, we haven't been pushed out and his psyche is fine. We have no complaints about how he's being treated and won't be signing up for any sort of class action lawsuit.
We've had the same good experience at BASIS with our child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AFTER BASIS DC had to settle with OCR here rather expensively for their conduct towards IEP students the year they opened in DC, this is what they did at their teacher training elsewhere - I guess it really is the BASIS Block Ponzi scheme - but you would think they would stop being so openly arrogant and stupid about it.....
"Hello, I just wanted to share this and see what type of response I can get. I am involved in an on going complaint I filed against BASIS ed. with the Office of Civil Rights for openly stating to myself as well as numerous other educators at their July 2014 teacher training that they DO NOT and WILL NOT modify their curriculum for students with disabilities. Since the OCR accepted and took on my complaint, BASIS has come to a settlement agreement (please be sure to understand that they are not admitting to fault or guilt) with the OCR and have been placed on a series of OCR monitored trainings and changes to their core policies in regard to the no modification policy they trained me on including section 504 and how it relates to special education. My OCR attorney has asked if I would like to start a class action law suit against BASIS, however their needs to be 100 or more families with students that have been discriminated against by BASIS either while enrolled or during the process of enrollment (e.g. being told they will not modify their curriculum for a student). Please email me if you are interested. I will be keeping a running total of interested parties and sending out periodic emails to keep everyone posted as to how many people actually are interested. I will send out an email about every 3-4 weeks. Also, forward my email to anyone that could have possibly had this happen to their child or children. Please lets take a stand against an institution that openly trained employees to refuse modifications to students with disabilities.
Best,
Deborah Graham
dgraham222002@gmail.com"
I have mixed feelings on this. On one hand they should attempt to reach each student, on the other hand YOU don't have to send your kid there., Everyone knows its a tough school and as a parent you need to find the right fit for your kid. Its an accelerated school (and we need more of those in DC quite frankly) so why did expect it be different for your kid? the City does not require you to send your kid to school at Basis.
Also, NO public school modifies curriculum for students with disabilities (e.g. changes what is required for graduation or 'waters down' classes). Further Common Core standards apply to all students and kids with disabilities are expected to make progress toward them.
What schools are required to do under the law are provide accommodations or support, and sometimes modified instruction, that enables students with disabilities to access the curriculum.
Year 1 at BASIS was a mess in terms of accommodations, ignorance and paperwork for students with disabilities. I think it was due to incompetence and stupidity -- not a conspiracy theory.
Year 2 they then hired a very strong director of special education who advocates tireless and effectively for the kids with learning disabilities and things improved dramatically. She is still there 3 years later. My kid is still there, doing well, we haven't been pushed out and his psyche is fine. We have no complaints about how he's being treated and won't be signing up for any sort of class action lawsuit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AFTER BASIS DC had to settle with OCR here rather expensively for their conduct towards IEP students the year they opened in DC, this is what they did at their teacher training elsewhere - I guess it really is the BASIS Block Ponzi scheme - but you would think they would stop being so openly arrogant and stupid about it.....
"Hello, I just wanted to share this and see what type of response I can get. I am involved in an on going complaint I filed against BASIS ed. with the Office of Civil Rights for openly stating to myself as well as numerous other educators at their July 2014 teacher training that they DO NOT and WILL NOT modify their curriculum for students with disabilities. Since the OCR accepted and took on my complaint, BASIS has come to a settlement agreement (please be sure to understand that they are not admitting to fault or guilt) with the OCR and have been placed on a series of OCR monitored trainings and changes to their core policies in regard to the no modification policy they trained me on including section 504 and how it relates to special education. My OCR attorney has asked if I would like to start a class action law suit against BASIS, however their needs to be 100 or more families with students that have been discriminated against by BASIS either while enrolled or during the process of enrollment (e.g. being told they will not modify their curriculum for a student). Please email me if you are interested. I will be keeping a running total of interested parties and sending out periodic emails to keep everyone posted as to how many people actually are interested. I will send out an email about every 3-4 weeks. Also, forward my email to anyone that could have possibly had this happen to their child or children. Please lets take a stand against an institution that openly trained employees to refuse modifications to students with disabilities.
Best,
Deborah Graham
dgraham222002@gmail.com"
I have mixed feelings on this. On one hand they should attempt to reach each student, on the other hand YOU don't have to send your kid there., Everyone knows its a tough school and as a parent you need to find the right fit for your kid. Its an accelerated school (and we need more of those in DC quite frankly) so why did expect it be different for your kid? the City does not require you to send your kid to school at Basis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AFTER BASIS DC had to settle with OCR here rather expensively for their conduct towards IEP students the year they opened in DC, this is what they did at their teacher training elsewhere - I guess it really is the BASIS Block Ponzi scheme - but you would think they would stop being so openly arrogant and stupid about it.....
"Hello, I just wanted to share this and see what type of response I can get. I am involved in an on going complaint I filed against BASIS ed. with the Office of Civil Rights for openly stating to myself as well as numerous other educators at their July 2014 teacher training that they DO NOT and WILL NOT modify their curriculum for students with disabilities. Since the OCR accepted and took on my complaint, BASIS has come to a settlement agreement (please be sure to understand that they are not admitting to fault or guilt) with the OCR and have been placed on a series of OCR monitored trainings and changes to their core policies in regard to the no modification policy they trained me on including section 504 and how it relates to special education. My OCR attorney has asked if I would like to start a class action law suit against BASIS, however their needs to be 100 or more families with students that have been discriminated against by BASIS either while enrolled or during the process of enrollment (e.g. being told they will not modify their curriculum for a student). Please email me if you are interested. I will be keeping a running total of interested parties and sending out periodic emails to keep everyone posted as to how many people actually are interested. I will send out an email about every 3-4 weeks. Also, forward my email to anyone that could have possibly had this happen to their child or children. Please lets take a stand against an institution that openly trained employees to refuse modifications to students with disabilities.
Best,
Deborah Graham
dgraham222002@gmail.com"
I have mixed feelings on this. On one hand they should attempt to reach each student, on the other hand YOU don't have to send your kid there., Everyone knows its a tough school and as a parent you need to find the right fit for your kid. Its an accelerated school (and we need more of those in DC quite frankly) so why did expect it be different for your kid? the City does not require you to send your kid to school at Basis.
Anonymous wrote:AFTER BASIS DC had to settle with OCR here rather expensively for their conduct towards IEP students the year they opened in DC, this is what they did at their teacher training elsewhere - I guess it really is the BASIS Block Ponzi scheme - but you would think they would stop being so openly arrogant and stupid about it.....
"Hello, I just wanted to share this and see what type of response I can get. I am involved in an on going complaint I filed against BASIS ed. with the Office of Civil Rights for openly stating to myself as well as numerous other educators at their July 2014 teacher training that they DO NOT and WILL NOT modify their curriculum for students with disabilities. Since the OCR accepted and took on my complaint, BASIS has come to a settlement agreement (please be sure to understand that they are not admitting to fault or guilt) with the OCR and have been placed on a series of OCR monitored trainings and changes to their core policies in regard to the no modification policy they trained me on including section 504 and how it relates to special education. My OCR attorney has asked if I would like to start a class action law suit against BASIS, however their needs to be 100 or more families with students that have been discriminated against by BASIS either while enrolled or during the process of enrollment (e.g. being told they will not modify their curriculum for a student). Please email me if you are interested. I will be keeping a running total of interested parties and sending out periodic emails to keep everyone posted as to how many people actually are interested. I will send out an email about every 3-4 weeks. Also, forward my email to anyone that could have possibly had this happen to their child or children. Please lets take a stand against an institution that openly trained employees to refuse modifications to students with disabilities.
Best,
Deborah Graham
dgraham222002@gmail.com"
Anonymous wrote:I thought Brent fed to both Jefferson and EH -- and I bet it's not hard to get in OOB if I am wrong. SWS feeds to EH with Maury, though the parents don't seem to be interacting much about this.
And I don't feel too rosy about all applicants getting slots at Basis next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BASIS will start limiting 5th grade openings to comply with the building's occupancy numbers. The more students stay for high school, the less 5th grade openings.
Maury and Brent parents might start thinking about all of their options across the city (not just hoping for BASIS and Latin) unless they plan to all hold hands and jump into EH together.
well last year over half the LEAP class (those who were considered academically advanced in 8th grade) chose to LEAVE instead of going to high school at BASIS DC and I don't think they will ever have that many takers who can raise the tide and float all boats. It was more like departing from a sinking ship. Those advanced kids who stayed chose misery and will get into great schools, but how will BASIS DC push out the rest who did not get into Walls and aren't zoned for Wilson? Their first full graduating classes will indeed be interesting...
Indeed it will be interesting. Except for a couple very bright students, the rest are just normal average youths believing they survived BASIS because of their mental ability. Wrong>
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BASIS will start limiting 5th grade openings to comply with the building's occupancy numbers. The more students stay for high school, the less 5th grade openings.
Maury and Brent parents might start thinking about all of their options across the city (not just hoping for BASIS and Latin) unless they plan to all hold hands and jump into EH together.
well last year over half the LEAP class (those who were considered academically advanced in 8th grade) chose to LEAVE instead of going to high school at BASIS DC and I don't think they will ever have that many takers who can raise the tide and float all boats. It was more like departing from a sinking ship. Those advanced kids who stayed chose misery and will get into great schools, but how will BASIS DC push out the rest who did not get into Walls and aren't zoned for Wilson? Their first full graduating classes will indeed be interesting...
Anonymous wrote:Apparently no one on this thread went to the info session last week.
What would be interesting to know is whether they plan on starting up with all grades immediately, pending charter amendment approval.
In other cities BASIS has 'grown down' by one grade a year (adding 4th, then 3rd, then 2nd) etc.
Given the cost of real estate here if that is feasible or not and they now have experience in other cities with all those grades, so there may be less need to go slow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they still saying Ms Sardek will be the elementary' new Head of School? She is ridiculously unqualified choice for the position.
+1
Anonymous wrote:BASIS will start limiting 5th grade openings to comply with the building's occupancy numbers. The more students stay for high school, the less 5th grade openings.
Maury and Brent parents might start thinking about all of their options across the city (not just hoping for BASIS and Latin) unless they plan to all hold hands and jump into EH together.