Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Years away! thought it was 2025 or 2026, and now years away lol At least I do not have to wondering if basis is too much for elementary kids now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
My understanding is they're not willing to locate in low-income areas, so they're having a very hard time finding a building or even something to demolish.
Well, they want to be in a very transit-accessible, central location, like now. More than half of BASIS students commute on their own via metro or bus (including us), this is a big part of their whole deal (and makes it a school that has kids from all 8 wards). Honestly a k-12 building would solve a lot of problems. The biggest complaint from the current families by far is the building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Years away! thought it was 2025 or 2026, and now years away lol At least I do not have to wondering if basis is too much for elementary kids now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
My understanding is they're not willing to locate in low-income areas, so they're having a very hard time finding a building or even something to demolish.
Well, they want to be in a very transit-accessible, central location, like now. More than half of BASIS students commute on their own via metro or bus (including us), this is a big part of their whole deal (and makes it a school that has kids from all 8 wards). Honestly a k-12 building would solve a lot of problems. The biggest complaint from the current families by far is the building.
Add that right now, they are half a block from Archives and the green line, half a block from a bus stop that serves capitol hill, and like two blocks from Gallery place and the red line. Many, many BASIS use all of these methods to get to school, so being "close enough" to the brookland metro is not likely to be comparable.
+1. The building is obviously not great, but the location is amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Years away! thought it was 2025 or 2026, and now years away lol At least I do not have to wondering if basis is too much for elementary kids now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
My understanding is they're not willing to locate in low-income areas, so they're having a very hard time finding a building or even something to demolish.
Well, they want to be in a very transit-accessible, central location, like now. More than half of BASIS students commute on their own via metro or bus (including us), this is a big part of their whole deal (and makes it a school that has kids from all 8 wards). Honestly a k-12 building would solve a lot of problems. The biggest complaint from the current families by far is the building.
Add that right now, they are half a block from Archives and the green line, half a block from a bus stop that serves capitol hill, and like two blocks from Gallery place and the red line. Many, many BASIS use all of these methods to get to school, so being "close enough" to the brookland metro is not likely to be comparable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Years away! thought it was 2025 or 2026, and now years away lol At least I do not have to wondering if basis is too much for elementary kids now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
My understanding is they're not willing to locate in low-income areas, so they're having a very hard time finding a building or even something to demolish.
Well, they want to be in a very transit-accessible, central location, like now. More than half of BASIS students commute on their own via metro or bus (including us), this is a big part of their whole deal (and makes it a school that has kids from all 8 wards). Honestly a k-12 building would solve a lot of problems. The biggest complaint from the current families by far is the building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Years away! thought it was 2025 or 2026, and now years away lol At least I do not have to wondering if basis is too much for elementary kids now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
My understanding is they're not willing to locate in low-income areas, so they're having a very hard time finding a building or even something to demolish.
Anonymous wrote:I remember talking with the old Head of School about this. BASIS owns the building it’s in right now, and they don’t want give it up because they like that it’s centrally located. The plan was to find a suitable PK-4 building nearby, but no surprise, that didn’t happen.
Anonymous wrote:Years away! thought it was 2025 or 2026, and now years away lol At least I do not have to wondering if basis is too much for elementary kids now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Not happening yet, there is not building, no concrete plans, and BASIS doesn't really talk about it to current families. The rumor is that thy want to find a K-12 building and move everyone over eventually (rather than have two buildings). Might be years away (I have a current BASIS students and an elementary schooler and I don't anticipate anything will change before my younger kid is in middle school).
Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Anonymous wrote:I don't see K-4 is listed in the lottery system. I guess this is not official yet? can anybody share the status of it. thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand these demographic discussions. IME, the students who struggle the most at BASIS are UMC white kids. I don’t think BASIS will start struggling if less of them attend.
That’s an interesting observation, especially since it’s inconsistent with the reported PARCC scores, which show a pretty substantial gap in favor of white kids. If BASIS had to go just on its nonwhite scores, it wouldn’t be ranked nearly so highly. And I’m under the impression that BASIS cares a lot about rankings.
Why do you think there’s such a discrepancy between your observations and the data?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand these demographic discussions. IME, the students who struggle the most at BASIS are UMC white kids. I don’t think BASIS will start struggling if less of them attend.
That’s an interesting observation, especially since it’s inconsistent with the reported PARCC scores, which show a pretty substantial gap in favor of white kids. If BASIS had to go just on its nonwhite scores, it wouldn’t be ranked nearly so highly. And I’m under the impression that BASIS cares a lot about rankings.
Why do you think there’s such a discrepancy between your observations and the data?
Come on, that's true of almost every school with a substantial white cohort in the city. Where does your nitpicking get you? No school has a magic wand to fix the poverty. There are a handful of boot camp DC charters where low SES minority students compete with whites on PARCC scores, that's it.
The PP’s position is that “the students who struggle the most at BASIS are UMC white kids.” I didn’t say they were wrong. I just think it’s an interesting observation, since the tests say the opposite.