Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
??? No one even knows where this school will be located.
Everyone knows where this school will be located. Every split basis campus does things the same way.
So where exactly will this not yet approved school be? Since you know, please share.
.
The school has said it will be close to the current campus. They implied it will be close enough to share facilities.
Yes, exactly. In my PP I was assuming that the new campus would be near the existing campus. That's what BASIS said and that's what it's like at every BASIS split campus. Someone responded objecting that I had no idea where the new school would be located (from the perspective of saying where commuting would be convenient from, not like the exact street address).
But where? There’s no buildings around there with outdoor space. The nearby daycares play on the sidewalk. Is that what BASIS is planning?
Anonymous wrote:^^ And all of this is ultimately a DCPS failure, because parents will be picking the school for the MS feed, not because they actually prefer it to some of their Hill DCPS options for ES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
??? No one even knows where this school will be located.
Everyone knows where this school will be located. Every split basis campus does things the same way.
So where exactly will this not yet approved school be? Since you know, please share.
.
The school has said it will be close to the current campus. They implied it will be close enough to share facilities.
Yes, exactly. In my PP I was assuming that the new campus would be near the existing campus. That's what BASIS said and that's what it's like at every BASIS split campus. Someone responded objecting that I had no idea where the new school would be located (from the perspective of saying where commuting would be convenient from, not like the exact street address).
But where? There’s no buildings around there with outdoor space. The nearby daycares play on the sidewalk. Is that what BASIS is planning?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
??? No one even knows where this school will be located.
Everyone knows where this school will be located. Every split basis campus does things the same way.
So where exactly will this not yet approved school be? Since you know, please share.
.
The school has said it will be close to the current campus. They implied it will be close enough to share facilities.
Yes, exactly. In my PP I was assuming that the new campus would be near the existing campus. That's what BASIS said and that's what it's like at every BASIS split campus. Someone responded objecting that I had no idea where the new school would be located (from the perspective of saying where commuting would be convenient from, not like the exact street address).
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Does it have a courtyard that could be used as a playground?
Hill parents should be worried. This will pull a lot of JO, Miner and possibly Ludlow parents away from their IB school.
Also, why is Alex Rose presenting to the ANC? So much for not pulling away resources from the current school (which the BASIS board promised they wouldn't do).
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Does it have a courtyard that could be used as a playground?
Hill parents should be worried. This will pull a lot of JO, Miner and possibly Ludlow parents away from their IB school.
Also, why is Alex Rose presenting to the ANC? So much for not pulling away resources from the current school (which the BASIS board promised they wouldn't do).
Anonymous wrote:Looks like Basis is eyeing 300 I St NE for elementary campus. Not sure how that will enable facility sharing with middle/high school campus.
https://anc6c.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/PZE-2023-06-14-Report.pdf
Anonymous wrote:You're painting with too broad a brush. Our DCPS ES has clearly upped its game in the past decade to cater to IB families who stay. Sounds like you didn't stay for 5th. Also, Stuart Hobson offers much more advanced math and somewhat more advanced English than it did a decade back to serve IB families with kids who work at or above grade level.
It's not that nothing changes in DCPS to serve high fliers, it's that enough doesn't change (still no academic tracking for science or social studies). Charters have their own problems, often including weak facilities and subpar teacher pay/higher turnover than the better ES and MS DCPS programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A common enough tale. Bring on the academic competition a BASIS elementary program would provide to shake DCPS and fellow charters up a little.
All the opening of charter schools has done is make DCPS 5th grade and middle school weaker. There is no “shaking up” DCPS. They simply DNGAF about catering to high fliers.