Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP who left Basis due to its language curriculum policies has posted the same comments repeatedly in this and prior threads.
For someone who has no “rage,” she sure feels the need to vent a lot.
I’m sorry Basis didn’t work out for her family. That said Basis is incredibly transparent about its requirements. There should have been no surprise.
NP - I agree. The schedules are quite a juggling act for the administration and they are already pretty open to having high school students take as many APs as they do or don't want, take beyond-AP Calculus classes, and outside electives.
I would not expect my DC to lottery in to an immersion school past the beginning years and be brought up to speed in Mandarin or Spanish. If your student is already bilingual, can't you just supplement? We supplement in instrumental music and dance instruction not offered at the school.
NP who disagrees. BASIS is lame to lack ambition on language instruction vs. other academic subjects. BS that it's just the one poster, a single current or former parent who feels this way.
Major world languages aren't specialized subjects, like dance or instrumental music, in today's world. BASIS won't leave families alone who don't want beginning language instruction vs. advanced language instruction. They won't let kids take a language block as a study hall or computer software learning session to build advanced skills.
What it boils down to is that BASIS is regimented to a nutty degree.
It's just regimented in a way you don't like.
I can't imagine why you would ever send your kid there if continuing a language is that important to you.
Yes, because it's regimented in a stifling way for the most advanced students outside the STEM realm. It's a STEM program without the tech/labs/research or engineering component. DC public's jewel in the crown for stem could do much better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the poster you're responding to, but the fact remains that a school can only wrest so much excellence out of one-size-fits-all solutions piled on top of one-size-fits-all solutions
Other than the two MIT admits last year, I haven't been wowed by BASIS college admissions.
Their boot camp style formula for college success only gets them so far.
And the one that got in early to Yale.
Wasn't this one a legacy admit?
not the one I know.
2020 class - 2 at Yale, 1 at Harvard, one at MIT, one at Stanford, one at Dartmouth, to start. . .
No kids at Basis but that’s impressive for their small class size.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP who left Basis due to its language curriculum policies has posted the same comments repeatedly in this and prior threads.
For someone who has no “rage,” she sure feels the need to vent a lot.
I’m sorry Basis didn’t work out for her family. That said Basis is incredibly transparent about its requirements. There should have been no surprise.
NP - I agree. The schedules are quite a juggling act for the administration and they are already pretty open to having high school students take as many APs as they do or don't want, take beyond-AP Calculus classes, and outside electives.
I would not expect my DC to lottery in to an immersion school past the beginning years and be brought up to speed in Mandarin or Spanish. If your student is already bilingual, can't you just supplement? We supplement in instrumental music and dance instruction not offered at the school.
NP who disagrees. BASIS is lame to lack ambition on language instruction vs. other academic subjects. BS that it's just the one poster, a single current or former parent who feels this way.
Major world languages aren't specialized subjects, like dance or instrumental music, in today's world. BASIS won't leave families alone who don't want beginning language instruction vs. advanced language instruction. They won't let kids take a language block as a study hall or computer software learning session to build advanced skills.
What it boils down to is that BASIS is regimented to a nutty degree.
It's just regimented in a way you don't like.
I can't imagine why you would ever send your kid there if continuing a language is that important to you.
Yes, because it's regimented in a stifling way for the most advanced students outside the STEM realm. It's a STEM program without the tech/labs/research or engineering component. DC public's jewel in the crown for STEM could do much better.
Anonymous wrote:
I don't know how it works in other places, but in DC, charter schools are forbidden to have entrance requirements. It wouldn't be equitable for students who have access to supplemental or accelerated curricula to have an increased chance to access a public school (and charter schools are public).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
BASIS just isn't great at innovating, as a franchise or a DC campus. BASIS is hardly the only program in which middle school kids can cover chem, bio and physics. Mine currently take on-line science courses through Johns Hopkins CTY and Stanford's on-line middle school program covering roughly the same science content.
Ok, but why should they spend extra resources to bring new kids up to speed - what you propose is setting them up to fail. And they can't select based on what classes a kid has taken before ore not.
They seem comfortable with their set up, so it is what it is.
This is it. They cannot administer an entrance exam, for example. They are transparent about this. To the PPP if you think it's wrongheaded, raise your concerns with the PCSB.
BASIS DC must operate differently than the BASIS charters in other states. They can and do give entrance exams for both math and English for kids entering after 5th. If you don't pass the exam, they'll offer admission for a lower grade instead. My DD joined BASIS in 7th in another state. While she has missed some content in the science courses, she's doing fine so far.
I don't know how it works in other places, but in DC, charter schools are forbidden to have entrance requirements. It wouldn't be equitable for students who have access to supplemental or accelerated curricula to have an increased chance to access a public school (and charter schools are public).
How does Walls, Banneker, McKinley Tech get around this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
BASIS just isn't great at innovating, as a franchise or a DC campus. BASIS is hardly the only program in which middle school kids can cover chem, bio and physics. Mine currently take on-line science courses through Johns Hopkins CTY and Stanford's on-line middle school program covering roughly the same science content.
Ok, but why should they spend extra resources to bring new kids up to speed - what you propose is setting them up to fail. And they can't select based on what classes a kid has taken before ore not.
They seem comfortable with their set up, so it is what it is.
This is it. They cannot administer an entrance exam, for example. They are transparent about this. To the PPP if you think it's wrongheaded, raise your concerns with the PCSB.
BASIS DC must operate differently than the BASIS charters in other states. They can and do give entrance exams for both math and English for kids entering after 5th. If you don't pass the exam, they'll offer admission for a lower grade instead. My DD joined BASIS in 7th in another state. While she has missed some content in the science courses, she's doing fine so far.
I don't know how it works in other places, but in DC, charter schools are forbidden to have entrance requirements. It wouldn't be equitable for students who have access to supplemental or accelerated curricula to have an increased chance to access a public school (and charter schools are public).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the poster you're responding to, but the fact remains that a school can only wrest so much excellence out of one-size-fits-all solutions piled on top of one-size-fits-all solutions
Other than the two MIT admits last year, I haven't been wowed by BASIS college admissions.
Their boot camp style formula for college success only gets them so far.
And the one that got in early to Yale.
Wasn't this one a legacy admit?
not the one I know.
2020 class - 2 at Yale, 1 at Harvard, one at MIT, one at Stanford, one at Dartmouth, to start. . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
BASIS just isn't great at innovating, as a franchise or a DC campus. BASIS is hardly the only program in which middle school kids can cover chem, bio and physics. Mine currently take on-line science courses through Johns Hopkins CTY and Stanford's on-line middle school program covering roughly the same science content.
Ok, but why should they spend extra resources to bring new kids up to speed - what you propose is setting them up to fail. And they can't select based on what classes a kid has taken before ore not.
They seem comfortable with their set up, so it is what it is.
This is it. They cannot administer an entrance exam, for example. They are transparent about this. To the PPP if you think it's wrongheaded, raise your concerns with the PCSB.
BASIS DC must operate differently than the BASIS charters in other states. They can and do give entrance exams for both math and English for kids entering after 5th. If you don't pass the exam, they'll offer admission for a lower grade instead. My DD joined BASIS in 7th in another state. While she has missed some content in the science courses, she's doing fine so far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the poster you're responding to, but the fact remains that a school can only wrest so much excellence out of one-size-fits-all solutions piled on top of one-size-fits-all solutions
Other than the two MIT admits last year, I haven't been wowed by BASIS college admissions.
Their boot camp style formula for college success only gets them so far.
And the one that got in early to Yale.
Wasn't this one a legacy admit?
not the one I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the poster you're responding to, but the fact remains that a school can only wrest so much excellence out of one-size-fits-all solutions piled on top of one-size-fits-all solutions
Other than the two MIT admits last year, I haven't been wowed by BASIS college admissions.
Their boot camp style formula for college success only gets them so far.
And the one that got in early to Yale.
Wasn't this one a legacy admit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the poster you're responding to, but the fact remains that a school can only wrest so much excellence out of one-size-fits-all solutions piled on top of one-size-fits-all solutions
Other than the two MIT admits last year, I haven't been wowed by BASIS college admissions.
Their boot camp style formula for college success only gets them so far.
And the one that got in early to Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP who left Basis due to its language curriculum policies has posted the same comments repeatedly in this and prior threads.
For someone who has no “rage,” she sure feels the need to vent a lot.
I’m sorry Basis didn’t work out for her family. That said Basis is incredibly transparent about its requirements. There should have been no surprise.
NP - I agree. The schedules are quite a juggling act for the administration and they are already pretty open to having high school students take as many APs as they do or don't want, take beyond-AP Calculus classes, and outside electives.
I would not expect my DC to lottery in to an immersion school past the beginning years and be brought up to speed in Mandarin or Spanish. If your student is already bilingual, can't you just supplement? We supplement in instrumental music and dance instruction not offered at the school.
NP who disagrees. BASIS is lame to lack ambition on language instruction vs. other academic subjects. BS that it's just the one poster, a single current or former parent who feels this way.
Major world languages aren't specialized subjects, like dance or instrumental music, in today's world. BASIS won't leave families alone who don't want beginning language instruction vs. advanced language instruction. They won't let kids take a language block as a study hall or computer software learning session to build advanced skills.
What it boils down to is that BASIS is regimented to a nutty degree.
It's just regimented in a way you don't like.
I can't imagine why you would ever send your kid there if continuing a language is that important to you.
Anonymous wrote:Not the poster you're responding to, but the fact remains that a school can only wrest so much excellence out of one-size-fits-all solutions piled on top of one-size-fits-all solutions
Other than the two MIT admits last year, I haven't been wowed by BASIS college admissions.
Their boot camp style formula for college success only gets them so far.