Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
By the way, where do you plan to send your super-bright fourth grader?
We're planning to keep him in DCPS for 5th, then St. Anselm's (boys Benedictine Abbey school) in Brookland, if he gets in. We're not Catholic but the school is 10K cheaper than many NW privates, and closer to us, and sends many boys to Georgetown, Ivies etc. He will continue to do Johns Hopkins CTY camps in the summers, which he loves. St. Anselm's is no jock school, but at least they have grass, a stage, an orchestra etc. I also like the fact that they don't weed boys out. DC is shy so we don't want hard-earned friends leaving.
I know little about St. Anselm's, so I read some of the reviews on http://www.greatschools.org/washington-dc/washington/172-St.-Anselms-Abbey-School/?sortBy=&tab=reviews&page=1
The vast majority of the reviews were positive.
The following review levels charges against St. Anselm's that are similar to those often leveled against BASIS DC:
This is a great school that struggles a bit with boys not focused on academic achievement. Like any school, it's better for students who enjoy studying or have structures that support 3-4 hours of homework. Along with others, our son struggles in courses like Latin and Physics with significant homework loads and demanding teachers not inclined to focus on marginal students. Occasionally, that has meant as many as half of a class receive a D or F and face academic probation. The school gives its teachers and students a lot of freedom and the boys not as in tune with the academic rigor can disrupt a class or make inappropriate comments. In other private schools, talented kids who are high C or low B students might not be as marginalized in class, or may excel in athletics or extracurriculars (not a major focus here), and see themselves as valued (if not outstanding) members of academic community. The more-or-less bottom half of the classes here seem to suffer here more than at other schools with similar profiles. Our experience is this is wonderfulfor a talented boy who studies but will stress someone who is gifted but not inclined to study more than 10 hours a week.
The following would give me pause:
I was excited to have my bright son attend St. Anselm's, but it really turned into a nightmare. The bullying was brutal and the school seemed not to care. Multiple times I asked for help and none was given. I was told that my son's class was exceptionally horrid and at one point an administrator said most of the boys with ugly behavior would be asked to leave-that did not happen. I feel this was a good school that lost its way. Overt racial hatred really was soul-crushing to my son. We are a family that embraces all cultures and when kids made whipping noises to the african-american students and made impassioned arguments about slavery being morally correct, I could only shake my head and promise my son to get him out of the school.
—Submitted by a parent
Good luck to you and your son.
Interesting, the vast majority of the St. Anselm's reviews on Great Schools are positive. When I checked BASIS DC on Great Schools was was surprised by the large number of negative reviews. Why didn't you post those on DCUM?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
By the way, where do you plan to send your super-bright fourth grader?
We're planning to keep him in DCPS for 5th, then St. Anselm's (boys Benedictine Abbey school) in Brookland, if he gets in. We're not Catholic but the school is 10K cheaper than many NW privates, and closer to us, and sends many boys to Georgetown, Ivies etc. He will continue to do Johns Hopkins CTY camps in the summers, which he loves. St. Anselm's is no jock school, but at least they have grass, a stage, an orchestra etc. I also like the fact that they don't weed boys out. DC is shy so we don't want hard-earned friends leaving.
I know little about St. Anselm's, so I read some of the reviews on http://www.greatschools.org/washington-dc/washington/172-St.-Anselms-Abbey-School/?sortBy=&tab=reviews&page=1
The vast majority of the reviews were positive.
The following review levels charges against St. Anselm's that are similar to those often leveled against BASIS DC:
This is a great school that struggles a bit with boys not focused on academic achievement. Like any school, it's better for students who enjoy studying or have structures that support 3-4 hours of homework. Along with others, our son struggles in courses like Latin and Physics with significant homework loads and demanding teachers not inclined to focus on marginal students. Occasionally, that has meant as many as half of a class receive a D or F and face academic probation. The school gives its teachers and students a lot of freedom and the boys not as in tune with the academic rigor can disrupt a class or make inappropriate comments. In other private schools, talented kids who are high C or low B students might not be as marginalized in class, or may excel in athletics or extracurriculars (not a major focus here), and see themselves as valued (if not outstanding) members of academic community. The more-or-less bottom half of the classes here seem to suffer here more than at other schools with similar profiles. Our experience is this is wonderfulfor a talented boy who studies but will stress someone who is gifted but not inclined to study more than 10 hours a week.
The following would give me pause:
I was excited to have my bright son attend St. Anselm's, but it really turned into a nightmare. The bullying was brutal and the school seemed not to care. Multiple times I asked for help and none was given. I was told that my son's class was exceptionally horrid and at one point an administrator said most of the boys with ugly behavior would be asked to leave-that did not happen. I feel this was a good school that lost its way. Overt racial hatred really was soul-crushing to my son. We are a family that embraces all cultures and when kids made whipping noises to the african-american students and made impassioned arguments about slavery being morally correct, I could only shake my head and promise my son to get him out of the school.
—Submitted by a parent
Good luck to you and your son.
Interesting, the vast majority of the St. Anselm's reviews on Great Schools are positive. When I checked BASIS DC on Great Schools was was surprised by the large number of negative reviews. Why didn't you post those on DCUM?

jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Unless I missed it, nobody has mentioned that the charter board last night refused BASIS's request to expand enrollment. Based on tweets I read, BASIS justified the request on the need for more students so that the school could pay its rent. When asked to provide an educational justification, officials were unable and the board unanimously rejected the expansion request.
Creative Minds' request to expand was also rejected.
But BASIS is still allowed to expand as originally planned. It also may be par for the course for the charter board to turn down a school's request for an increase in the cap in their first year of operation.
Yes, I think that is correct.
Anonymous wrote:All privates weed out. St. Anselm's is no different there.
What's concerning about BASIS is that it is public school that is happy to take tax dollars to operate and only wants to teach a certain type of student. Apparently 10% of the students they don't want have already been pushed out.As the PCSB recently noted, that's not a compelling educational stance.
These are all established schools. Rosario, Next Steps, ESF are adult ed or alternative schools for GED and teen parents, etc.Anonymous wrote:Saw this in the The nine schools that won permission to expand are: Carlos Rosario, DC Prep, KIPP DC, Next Step, E.L. Haynes, Education Strengthens Families, Excel, Paul and Washington Yu Ying.
Anybody know more about these expansions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
By the way, where do you plan to send your super-bright fourth grader?
We're planning to keep him in DCPS for 5th, then St. Anselm's (boys Benedictine Abbey school) in Brookland, if he gets in. We're not Catholic but the school is 10K cheaper than many NW privates, and closer to us, and sends many boys to Georgetown, Ivies etc. He will continue to do Johns Hopkins CTY camps in the summers, which he loves. St. Anselm's is no jock school, but at least they have grass, a stage, an orchestra etc. I also like the fact that they don't weed boys out. DC is shy so we don't want hard-earned friends leaving.
I know little about St. Anselm's, so I read some of the reviews on http://www.greatschools.org/washington-dc/washington/172-St.-Anselms-Abbey-School/?sortBy=&tab=reviews&page=1
The vast majority of the reviews were positive.
The following review levels charges against St. Anselm's that are similar to those often leveled against BASIS DC:
This is a great school that struggles a bit with boys not focused on academic achievement. Like any school, it's better for students who enjoy studying or have structures that support 3-4 hours of homework. Along with others, our son struggles in courses like Latin and Physics with significant homework loads and demanding teachers not inclined to focus on marginal students. Occasionally, that has meant as many as half of a class receive a D or F and face academic probation. The school gives its teachers and students a lot of freedom and the boys not as in tune with the academic rigor can disrupt a class or make inappropriate comments. In other private schools, talented kids who are high C or low B students might not be as marginalized in class, or may excel in athletics or extracurriculars (not a major focus here), and see themselves as valued (if not outstanding) members of academic community. The more-or-less bottom half of the classes here seem to suffer here more than at other schools with similar profiles. Our experience is this is wonderfulfor a talented boy who studies but will stress someone who is gifted but not inclined to study more than 10 hours a week.
The following would give me pause:
I was excited to have my bright son attend St. Anselm's, but it really turned into a nightmare. The bullying was brutal and the school seemed not to care. Multiple times I asked for help and none was given. I was told that my son's class was exceptionally horrid and at one point an administrator said most of the boys with ugly behavior would be asked to leave-that did not happen. I feel this was a good school that lost its way. Overt racial hatred really was soul-crushing to my son. We are a family that embraces all cultures and when kids made whipping noises to the african-american students and made impassioned arguments about slavery being morally correct, I could only shake my head and promise my son to get him out of the school.
—Submitted by a parent
Good luck to you and your son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
By the way, where do you plan to send your super-bright fourth grader?
We're planning to keep him in DCPS for 5th, then St. Anselm's (boys Benedictine Abbey school) in Brookland, if he gets in. We're not Catholic but the school is 10K cheaper than many NW privates, and closer to us, and sends many boys to Georgetown, Ivies etc. He will continue to do Johns Hopkins CTY camps in the summers, which he loves. St. Anselm's is no jock school, but at least they have grass, a stage, an orchestra etc. I also like the fact that they don't weed boys out. DC is shy so we don't want hard-earned friends leaving.
They don't weed out? First of all, they weed girls out, they don't even accept them in the first place. Secondly, they weed out anyone who can't come up with the $23,000 tuition. Funny that someone would jump on and criticize schools like BASIS that are open to all and which give everyone a chance about things like retention or "weeding out" (and even that's not an accurate characterization, as the students leaving BASIS self-selected out) and then turn around and trot out a school that's already excluded most DC students whether lower class, middle class and even many upper middle class kids, before they even had a chance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
By the way, where do you plan to send your super-bright fourth grader?
We're planning to keep him in DCPS for 5th, then St. Anselm's (boys Benedictine Abbey school) in Brookland, if he gets in. We're not Catholic but the school is 10K cheaper than many NW privates, and closer to us, and sends many boys to Georgetown, Ivies etc. He will continue to do Johns Hopkins CTY camps in the summers, which he loves. St. Anselm's is no jock school, but at least they have grass, a stage, an orchestra etc. I also like the fact that they don't weed boys out. DC is shy so we don't want hard-earned friends leaving.
This is a great school that struggles a bit with boys not focused on academic achievement. Like any school, it's better for students who enjoy studying or have structures that support 3-4 hours of homework. Along with others, our son struggles in courses like Latin and Physics with significant homework loads and demanding teachers not inclined to focus on marginal students. Occasionally, that has meant as many as half of a class receive a D or F and face academic probation. The school gives its teachers and students a lot of freedom and the boys not as in tune with the academic rigor can disrupt a class or make inappropriate comments. In other private schools, talented kids who are high C or low B students might not be as marginalized in class, or may excel in athletics or extracurriculars (not a major focus here), and see themselves as valued (if not outstanding) members of academic community. The more-or-less bottom half of the classes here seem to suffer here more than at other schools with similar profiles. Our experience is this is wonderfulfor a talented boy who studies but will stress someone who is gifted but not inclined to study more than 10 hours a week.
I was excited to have my bright son attend St. Anselm's, but it really turned into a nightmare. The bullying was brutal and the school seemed not to care. Multiple times I asked for help and none was given. I was told that my son's class was exceptionally horrid and at one point an administrator said most of the boys with ugly behavior would be asked to leave-that did not happen. I feel this was a good school that lost its way. Overt racial hatred really was soul-crushing to my son. We are a family that embraces all cultures and when kids made whipping noises to the african-american students and made impassioned arguments about slavery being morally correct, I could only shake my head and promise my son to get him out of the school.
—Submitted by a parent
Anonymous wrote:So BASIS doesn't have a football stadium. I don't really have a problem with that. Big whoop. Schools aren't about athletics anyways, those are extras. There's no athletics requirement in Title IX other than that IF schools provide athletics, it must be equal provisions for both genders. From my experiences, I've seen that schools with those athletic fields, amenities and facilities typically revolve more around patronage jobs and crony contracts than they do around meeting students needs, there is example after example of that everywhere, including the big affluent suburban areas. But either way, to each his own, try and balance those high school footbawl concussions, brain trauma and diminished cognitive ability against the prospect of a well honed mind going to MIT and becoming the next great engineer or scientist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
By the way, where do you plan to send your super-bright fourth grader?
We're planning to keep him in DCPS for 5th, then St. Anselm's (boys Benedictine Abbey school) in Brookland, if he gets in. We're not Catholic but the school is 10K cheaper than many NW privates, and closer to us, and sends many boys to Georgetown, Ivies etc. He will continue to do Johns Hopkins CTY camps in the summers, which he loves. St. Anselm's is no jock school, but at least they have grass, a stage, an orchestra etc. I also like the fact that they don't weed boys out. DC is shy so we don't want hard-earned friends leaving.
They don't weed out? First of all, they weed girls out, they don't even accept them in the first place. Secondly, they weed out anyone who can't come up with the $23,000 tuition. Funny that someone would jump on and criticize schools like BASIS that are open to all and which give everyone a chance about things like retention or "weeding out" (and even that's not an accurate characterization, as the students leaving BASIS self-selected out) and then turn around and trot out a school that's already excluded most DC students whether lower class, middle class and even many upper middle class kids, before they even had a chance.