Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like to thank the NY-centric posters for hijacking this already hijacked thread to enlighten us all about the miracle that was NYC public education in the 80s and 90s. It is ever so relevant to the discussion and clearly instructive to a path forward. You are doing the lord's work.
Perhaps it doesn't hurt for DC public school parents EotP with high ambitions for their children to be reminded of the extent to which they're being shortchanged on occasion.
I thought along these lines when I visited the big BASIS Scottsdale campus last year, when I was in the area for work. The administrators (middle-aged people) organize regular community events, a good many of the students join the program in 7th, 8th or 9th grades, and there's a lovely auditorium used for theatrical and orchestra performances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No denying that the BASIS building is a misery and the program remains hopelessly cash-strapped. A windowless cafeteria with black walls is a poor substitute indeed for a quiet, pleasant little library or media center staffed by a first-rate professional. If you want teens to zealously plug away on the road to the colleges of their dreams, provide them with minimally acceptable school facilities to do so here in the richest country ever to grace the earth.
The building for my HS alma mater, NYC's Hunter College, is very far from ideal, but it's a veritable palace by comparison. At Hunter, we were taught to challenge, to think for ourselves, to value an assertive student government. BASIS DC students are taught to do as they're told.
+1. Like this lyrical post. A high-powered high school w/out a library or student govt is downright creepy!
Anonymous wrote:I would like to thank the NY-centric posters for hijacking this already hijacked thread to enlighten us all about the miracle that was NYC public education in the 80s and 90s. It is ever so relevant to the discussion and clearly instructive to a path forward. You are doing the lord's work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No denying that the BASIS building is a misery and the program remains hopelessly cash-strapped. A windowless cafeteria with black walls is a poor substitute indeed for a quiet, pleasant little library or media center staffed by a first-rate professional. If you want teens to zealously plug away on the road to the colleges of their dreams, provide them with minimally acceptable school facilities to do so here in the richest country ever to grace the earth.
The building for my HS alma mater, NYC's Hunter College, is very far from ideal, but it's a veritable palace by comparison. At Hunter, we were taught to challenge, to think for ourselves, to value an assertive student government. BASIS DC students are taught to do as they're told.
+1. Like this lyrical post. A high-powered high school w/out a library or student govt is downright creepy!
Anonymous wrote:I attended Bronx Science (back in the day when it was more competitive than Stuyvesant, which was still in its old bldg). In any case, I remember hour-long commutes on the subway (with my T-square!)followed by a long walk past a subway car junkyard. The yard was made of concrete and the only nearby commerce was a truck that sold things like candy bars. I know there was an auditorium as I recall the occasional assembly. I have no memory of a library—I assume it existed but I potentially never entered it. The cafeteria had some windows but was huge and a place of mayhem.
The academics were top notch and the kids were smart (though I don’t recall us constantly challenging things; we were too focused on outdoing each other on the SAT; at least my crowd). In any case, you paint a very romantic view of Hunter.
Anyway, as far as buildings go, I think my kids are better off with their 10-15 minute commutes to BASIS, which has the benefit of being downtown and near the mall. At least to me it’s no worse than I had.
Anonymous wrote:No denying that the BASIS building is a misery and the program remains hopelessly cash-strapped. A windowless cafeteria with black walls is a poor substitute indeed for a quiet, pleasant little library or media center staffed by a first-rate professional. If you want teens to zealously plug away on the road to the colleges of their dreams, provide them with minimally acceptable school facilities to do so here in the richest country ever to grace the earth.
The building for my HS alma mater, NYC's Hunter College, is very far from ideal, but it's a veritable palace by comparison. At Hunter, we were taught to challenge, to think for ourselves, to value an assertive student government. BASIS DC students are taught to do as they're told.
Anonymous wrote:Basis bought the building 10 years ago $14 million. It is super convenient for parents who work downtown and kids who take the bus/metro.
The building is now worth $18-$20 million, so I guess that they made a shrewd investment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No denying that the BASIS building is a misery and the program remains hopelessly cash-strapped. A windowless cafeteria with black walls is a poor substitute indeed for a quiet, pleasant little library or media center staffed by a first-rate professional. If you want teens to zealously plug away on the road to the colleges of their dreams, provide them with minimally acceptable school facilities to do so here in the richest country ever to grace the earth.
The building for my HS alma mater, NYC's Hunter College, is very far from ideal, but it's a veritable palace by comparison. At Hunter, we were taught to challenge, to think for ourselves, to value an assertive student government. BASIS DC students are taught to do as they're told.
You sound like you were raised in a cult. Do you speak this way in real life?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No denying that the BASIS building is a misery and the program remains hopelessly cash-strapped. A windowless cafeteria with black walls is a poor substitute indeed for a quiet, pleasant little library or media center staffed by a first-rate professional. If you want teens to zealously plug away on the road to the colleges of their dreams, provide them with minimally acceptable school facilities to do so here in the richest country ever to grace the earth.
The building for my HS alma mater, NYC's Hunter College, is very far from ideal, but it's a veritable palace by comparison. At Hunter, we were taught to challenge, to think for ourselves, to value an assertive student government. BASIS DC students are taught to do as they're told.
You sound like you were raised in a cult. Do you speak this way in real life?
Anonymous wrote:No denying that the BASIS building is a misery and the program remains hopelessly cash-strapped. A windowless cafeteria with black walls is a poor substitute indeed for a quiet, pleasant little library or media center staffed by a first-rate professional. If you want teens to zealously plug away on the road to the colleges of their dreams, provide them with minimally acceptable school facilities to do so here in the richest country ever to grace the earth.
The building for my HS alma mater, NYC's Hunter College, is very far from ideal, but it's a veritable palace by comparison. At Hunter, we were taught to challenge, to think for ourselves, to value an assertive student government. BASIS DC students are taught to do as they're told.