Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basis middle school girls soccer playoff game against Latin at Audi field tomorrow evening at 5pm - so that is pretty darn cool!
Championship I mean!
Wow! But how is this possible if Basis doesn’t have a big sports field?
It’s the reason they will lose.
Anonymous wrote:These threads are so weird. Some families like BASIS, and some don't. No one needs to defend their choices. Just own your choice and be happy with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, you second it because you can't afford a private with decent facilities, extra curriculars and a stable faculty and don't want to move to the burbs.
You can't fool us. We schlepped our kids all over the Metro area for competitive baseball, basketball and lacrosse when they were at BASIS. The drill was as exhausting as it was expensive.
Oh weirdo, if I seconded the statement, I'd say so, but I don't speak in purity level or adulteration of magic. My kid seconds the statement, enthusiastically. My kid is over the moon giddy about their school and is the happiest they've been at any school yet. Pure, unadulterated magic is literally something my 5th grader would say. But then, sure, I can't afford private and I don't want to move to the burbs. Your powers of perception are pure and unadulterated. Weirdo.
The poster is a "weirdo" because of they shared their experience of squiring their kids to play normal team sports outside of BASIS, activities they had to pay for?
That's just how it works for many BASIS families. The arrangement isn't ideal.
We're at BASIS and I don't get this criticism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, you second it because you can't afford a private with decent facilities, extra curriculars and a stable faculty and don't want to move to the burbs.
You can't fool us. We schlepped our kids all over the Metro area for competitive baseball, basketball and lacrosse when they were at BASIS. The drill was as exhausting as it was expensive.
Oh weirdo, if I seconded the statement, I'd say so, but I don't speak in purity level or adulteration of magic. My kid seconds the statement, enthusiastically. My kid is over the moon giddy about their school and is the happiest they've been at any school yet. Pure, unadulterated magic is literally something my 5th grader would say. But then, sure, I can't afford private and I don't want to move to the burbs. Your powers of perception are pure and unadulterated. Weirdo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some parents on DCUM are brand new to the DC MS lottery scene. Let them learn the basics about BASIS DC if they wish.
...
The program doesn't lack basic sports facilities because it's a "small school" as stated on this thread. It lacks them for several other reasons:
*DCPS/the Mayor's Office seldom shares real estate with the charter sector, meaning that charters commonly wind up in buildings not fit for purpose, warehouses or office buildings w/out green space.
*The city council still won't allocate the same per capita/student allocations for DCPS schools as for charters, meaning that the latter run on shoestring budgets even if they fundraise constantly and successfully.
*Arizona HQ selected a cramped building for BASIS DC to renovate in a central location downtown more than a decade ago. The renovation could have created a basketball court on the roof (the architectural firm involved proposed this) but wasn't designed that way. Nobody involved in the campus selection and development has been on the scene in DC for years. BASIS DC has had 8 principals in 12 years.
Bowser doesn't "share" real estate with the charter sector. She wholeclothe throws DCPS students under the bus and gives their facilities away to charter and private schools... Read Valerie Jablow's column sometime: https://educationdc.net/author/vjablow/
And for those complaining about Basis' sports offerings, if you're not at Deal, I don't think you would be blown away by the sports offerings at DCPS middle schools...
Anonymous wrote:No, you second it because you can't afford a private with decent facilities, extra curriculars and a stable faculty and don't want to move to the burbs.
You can't fool us. We schlepped our kids all over the Metro area for competitive baseball, basketball and lacrosse when they were at BASIS. The drill was as exhausting as it was expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Some parents on DCUM are brand new to the DC MS lottery scene. Let them learn the basics about BASIS DC if they wish.
...
The program doesn't lack basic sports facilities because it's a "small school" as stated on this thread. It lacks them for several other reasons:
*DCPS/the Mayor's Office seldom shares real estate with the charter sector, meaning that charters commonly wind up in buildings not fit for purpose, warehouses or office buildings w/out green space.
*The city council still won't allocate the same per capita/student allocations for DCPS schools as for charters, meaning that the latter run on shoestring budgets even if they fundraise constantly and successfully.
*Arizona HQ selected a cramped building for BASIS DC to renovate in a central location downtown more than a decade ago. The renovation could have created a basketball court on the roof (the architectural firm involved proposed this) but wasn't designed that way. Nobody involved in the campus selection and development has been on the scene in DC for years. BASIS DC has had 8 principals in 12 years.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re new to the middle school lottery scene, you want to take all manner of BASIS boosting with a pinch of salt. Common sense says that sports are only going to be so good in a program without playing fields, tennis courts, a basketball court, gym, a weight room, a pool, full-time coaches etc.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re new to the middle school lottery scene, you want to take all manner of BASIS boosting with a pinch of salt. Common sense says that sports are only going to be so good in a program without playing fields, tennis courts, a basketball court, gym, a weight room, a pool, full-time coaches etc.