Anonymous wrote:Do families ever hire tutors to prepare for the BASIS comps? Are there tutors in the area who specifically specialize in BASIS comps tutoring? Based on a different thread regarding comps, it seems some students barely study compared to others so I know there’s a range of experiences. Just wondering if tutoring is at all common or if the students essentially rely on the school and perhaps study groups to prepare?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Hunter too and my favorite thing about the “Hunter College” poster is how they always call it Hunter College. I have literally never met another alum who calls it that, because that’s what we called the actual Hunter College (i.e., college that is part of the CUNY system that our administrators technically worked for) where we had some gym classes. Anyway, it always makes her posts every easy to spot and I’ve always wanted to ask her if her HS friends actually called it that and, if so, when she attended.
Also, Hunter’s building is awful. There are very few windows and the ones that there are are shaped like arrow slits. When a refrigeration unit malfunctioned on the top floor and squids for dissection went bad, they had to close the school for multiple days because the ventilation is so bad they couldn’t get rid of the smell. Also, teachers at one point sued over failed air quality tests being covered up. Finally, while I had a fabulous experience at Hunter, and it definitely encouraged independent thought, the GO (our student government) was totally window dressing… just like it is at almost every HS. Lots of kids ran largely for access to the GO office that everyone used for hook ups and it was basically a popularity contest for quasi-gunner types. Chris Hayes was student body President while I was there, so that’s kind of fun in retrospect. Anyway, I’m happy BASIS exists and hope my kids manage to lottery in.
This is amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. Practically how much time do middle-schoolers spend outside of the BASIS building in a school week?
They have access to great public libraries and the mall and other spaces nearby. Would you say MSers will have some outside time or other-building time most days in an average week, or two days week at minimum?
In good weather, they go to the Mall almost everyday. In colder weather, not so often. These past few years were weird because of Covid and all the unknowns, plus all the staff/kid absences because of quarantines— that made it harder to organize outside events. I’d see how things are next year.
As for library time— IME, they aren’t regularly going to the MLK library during the school day. Their schedules are pretty tight, and they are busy at school all day. That being said, there’s nothing stopping them from going to the library after school/extra-curriculars. Thinking back to my own public middle school experience, I don’t remember visiting the school library during the day unless a class was scheduled in there, which was very rare.
The most trying aspect of the BASIS building is that there isn't a quiet, light filled space for kids to read, study and work within the building. A full fledged library doesn't seem necessary, but a book filled room with at least a PT librarian would count for a lot. We do want better facilities and will go private for high school if we can swing it financially.
I mean, it would be nice if we could all attend Hogwarts, but we can’t, so I’m going to settle for the school that will teach my kid some math.
Right, if BASIS is the best you can do, you manage. We turned down a spot at Latin because we didn't think that their STEM curriculum was serious enough. Sometimes I wonder if we made the right decision.
We can't afford private middle school AND high school. But we can swing one or the other and don't want our children in the building after 8th grade. For DS in particular, there isn't enough space for a happy experience and he wants more serious extra curriculars he can pursue with classmates.
We all find ourselves tired of a bifurcated school experience where our teens activities (music and sports) are outside the school and the only other families we know are the ones we got to know at our DCPS elementary school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Hunter too and my favorite thing about the “Hunter College” poster is how they always call it Hunter College. I have literally never met another alum who calls it that, because that’s what we called the actual Hunter College (i.e., college that is part of the CUNY system that our administrators technically worked for) where we had some gym classes. Anyway, it always makes her posts every easy to spot and I’ve always wanted to ask her if her HS friends actually called it that and, if so, when she attended.
Also, Hunter’s building is awful. There are very few windows and the ones that there are are shaped like arrow slits. When a refrigeration unit malfunctioned on the top floor and squids for dissection went bad, they had to close the school for multiple days because the ventilation is so bad they couldn’t get rid of the smell. Also, teachers at one point sued over failed air quality tests being covered up. Finally, while I had a fabulous experience at Hunter, and it definitely encouraged independent thought, the GO (our student government) was totally window dressing… just like it is at almost every HS. Lots of kids ran largely for access to the GO office that everyone used for hook ups and it was basically a popularity contest for quasi-gunner types. Chris Hayes was student body President while I was there, so that’s kind of fun in retrospect. Anyway, I’m happy BASIS exists and hope my kids manage to lottery in.
This is amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Do families ever hire tutors to prepare for the BASIS comps? Are there tutors in the area who specifically specialize in BASIS comps tutoring? Based on a different thread regarding comps, it seems some students barely study compared to others so I know there’s a range of experiences. Just wondering if tutoring is at all common or if the students essentially rely on the school and perhaps study groups to prepare?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. Practically how much time do middle-schoolers spend outside of the BASIS building in a school week?
They have access to great public libraries and the mall and other spaces nearby. Would you say MSers will have some outside time or other-building time most days in an average week, or two days week at minimum?
In good weather, they go to the Mall almost everyday. In colder weather, not so often. These past few years were weird because of Covid and all the unknowns, plus all the staff/kid absences because of quarantines— that made it harder to organize outside events. I’d see how things are next year.
As for library time— IME, they aren’t regularly going to the MLK library during the school day. Their schedules are pretty tight, and they are busy at school all day. That being said, there’s nothing stopping them from going to the library after school/extra-curriculars. Thinking back to my own public middle school experience, I don’t remember visiting the school library during the day unless a class was scheduled in there, which was very rare.
The most trying aspect of the BASIS building is that there isn't a quiet, light filled space for kids to read, study and work within the building. A full fledged library doesn't seem necessary, but a book filled room with at least a PT librarian would count for a lot. We do want better facilities and will go private for high school if we can swing it financially.
I mean, it would be nice if we could all attend Hogwarts, but we can’t, so I’m going to settle for the school that will teach my kid some math.
Anonymous wrote:Checked with my spouse, bona fide Hunter grad (not alleged one you've referred to).
Actual name of the school is "Hunter Science High School," senior school of the 2 "Hunter College Campus Schools." He reports that NEW YORKERS simply say "Hunter." However, if they're referring to one of the schools in a conversation with people not necessarily familiar with them, they may go with "Hunter College high school."
I've toured the Hunter building + the BASIS DC building. The former isn't good, but a vast improvement over the latter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. Practically how much time do middle-schoolers spend outside of the BASIS building in a school week?
They have access to great public libraries and the mall and other spaces nearby. Would you say MSers will have some outside time or other-building time most days in an average week, or two days week at minimum?
In good weather, they go to the Mall almost everyday. In colder weather, not so often. These past few years were weird because of Covid and all the unknowns, plus all the staff/kid absences because of quarantines— that made it harder to organize outside events. I’d see how things are next year.
As for library time— IME, they aren’t regularly going to the MLK library during the school day. Their schedules are pretty tight, and they are busy at school all day. That being said, there’s nothing stopping them from going to the library after school/extra-curriculars. Thinking back to my own public middle school experience, I don’t remember visiting the school library during the day unless a class was scheduled in there, which was very rare.
The most trying aspect of the BASIS building is that there isn't a quiet, light filled space for kids to read, study and work within the building. A full fledged library doesn't seem necessary, but a book filled room with at least a PT librarian would count for a lot. We do want better facilities and will go private for high school if we can swing it financially.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Hunter too and my favorite thing about the “Hunter College” poster is how they always call it Hunter College. I have literally never met another alum who calls it that, because that’s what we called the actual Hunter College (i.e., college that is part of the CUNY system that our administrators technically worked for) where we had some gym classes. Anyway, it always makes her posts every easy to spot and I’ve always wanted to ask her if her HS friends actually called it that and, if so, when she attended.
Also, Hunter’s building is awful. There are very few windows and the ones that there are are shaped like arrow slits. When a refrigeration unit malfunctioned on the top floor and squids for dissection went bad, they had to close the school for multiple days because the ventilation is so bad they couldn’t get rid of the smell. Also, teachers at one point sued over failed air quality tests being covered up. Finally, while I had a fabulous experience at Hunter, and it definitely encouraged independent thought, the GO (our student government) was totally window dressing… just like it is at almost every HS. Lots of kids ran largely for access to the GO office that everyone used for hook ups and it was basically a popularity contest for quasi-gunner types. Chris Hayes was student body President while I was there, so that’s kind of fun in retrospect. Anyway, I’m happy BASIS exists and hope my kids manage to lottery in.