Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a current parent of two BASIS students, both of whom will be in high school by the time the BASIS elementary opens.
I don't want a town hall on how wonderful this new school will be. I really don't care.
I really just want reassurance that this won't impact my kids, including by diverting human and financial resources away from attracting quality high school teachers and supporting my kids in high school.
Frankly, BASIS' overall prestige will depend more on how it supports MY kids in high school, as demonstrated by their test scores and college admissions, than on anything else BASIS does. And the success of the elementary school will also depend on that, since the main reason Capitol Hill and others families will enroll is to secure a spot in a school with a strong high school path.
In the meanwhile, BASIS admins, please don't waste my time by hosting some happy, cheery kindergarten teacher from Arizona on a town hall to talk about how wonderful her classroom is. Again, I don't care.
You can’t figure out that you should just skip it? I promise you my Basis kids would know not to waste their time like you are.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a current parent of two BASIS students, both of whom will be in high school by the time the BASIS elementary opens.
I don't want a town hall on how wonderful this new school will be. I really don't care.
I really just want reassurance that this won't impact my kids, including by diverting human and financial resources away from attracting quality high school teachers and supporting my kids in high school.
Frankly, BASIS' overall prestige will depend more on how it supports MY kids in high school, as demonstrated by their test scores and college admissions, than on anything else BASIS does. And the success of the elementary school will also depend on that, since the main reason Capitol Hill and others families will enroll is to secure a spot in a school with a strong high school path.
In the meanwhile, BASIS admins, please don't waste my time by hosting some happy, cheery kindergarten teacher from Arizona on a town hall to talk about how wonderful her classroom is. Again, I don't care.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a current parent of two BASIS students, both of whom will be in high school by the time the BASIS elementary opens.
I don't want a town hall on how wonderful this new school will be. I really don't care.
I really just want reassurance that this won't impact my kids, including by diverting human and financial resources away from attracting quality high school teachers and supporting my kids in high school.
Frankly, BASIS' overall prestige will depend more on how it supports MY kids in high school, as demonstrated by their test scores and college admissions, than on anything else BASIS does. And the success of the elementary school will also depend on that, since the main reason Capitol Hill and others families will enroll is to secure a spot in a school with a strong high school path.
In the meanwhile, BASIS admins, please don't waste my time by hosting some happy, cheery kindergarten teacher from Arizona on a town hall to talk about how wonderful her classroom is. Again, I don't care.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a current parent of two BASIS students, both of whom will be in high school by the time the BASIS elementary opens.
I don't want a town hall on how wonderful this new school will be. I really don't care.
I really just want reassurance that this won't impact my kids, including by diverting human and financial resources away from attracting quality high school teachers and supporting my kids in high school.
Frankly, BASIS' overall prestige will depend more on how it supports MY kids in high school, as demonstrated by their test scores and college admissions, than on anything else BASIS does. And the success of the elementary school will also depend on that, since the main reason Capitol Hill and others families will enroll is to secure a spot in a school with a strong high school path.
In the meanwhile, BASIS admins, please don't waste my time by hosting some happy, cheery kindergarten teacher from Arizona on a town hall to talk about how wonderful her classroom is. Again, I don't care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes BASIS think their proposal will be approved when it was rejected last time?
This is why they are campaigning so hard for parent support.
By reaching out to current parents stuck in an awful building and telling them that great things about a building their kids will likely never get to use??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes BASIS think their proposal will be approved when it was rejected last time?
This is why they are campaigning so hard for parent support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just catching up — would the new elementary school definitely have feeder rights to the junior high/high school?
Yes. They said their initial plan is 80 feeder seats per grade.
It would be great for Hill MSs and upper elementary if BASIS MS started at 6th grade, and if the number of seats available at MS goes down. If Latin started at 6th it would be even better!
There is no talk of changing the entry year to 6th. BASIS believes they need to get kids earlier because nobody else can prepare kids for BASIS.
You are correct that this will make it very difficult for Hill families to lottery into BASIS if they want to stay at their elementary school through 4th.
It is almost as if BASIS isn't focused only on Capitol Hill. The nerve!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes BASIS think their proposal will be approved when it was rejected last time?
Maybe because they are the highest performing charter in the city according to the agency that authorized them which is the same agency that will need to approve the expansion? That agency (public charter school board) looks mostly at performance and demand. Basis has both.
So why did BASIS withdraw their application last time?
Demand for 5th grade is not the same thing as demand for elementary school and you know it.