Yes, it does. He would have been an immature mess if we started him in K on time. He's a year ahead of the rest and can therefore handle the longer days. He doesn't act out, and he listens. K isn't what it used to be. It's very academic. We weren't pushing our kid into an environment he couldn't handle. One extra year "to cook" did him some good. |
I am impatient with people who want to complain about Problem X but want other people to do the work it takes to fix Problem X. |
Learning colors, numbers, shapes, basic reading, writing and math is too academic. I found it very slow paced. I don't see how it is so academic. |
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People wait until you get into high school. Those refugee kids splattered all over local schools are 17yr old freshman. There are 21yr old kids in high school. It is insane.
But yes the redshirting is insane. My friend's son just turned 16 as a freshman and was 7 in K. I think there should be a minimum and maximum age. |
| Our friends held back their son so he could do an extra year in preschool after their younger child died and the family was in turmoil. The preschool teachers suggested they give him the extra year since he was struggling. I'm sure if someone didn't know the family, it might look like they just randomly held him back, but it was a very good decision for this family and this kid. By a few years later he might just seem like an older kid, but that extra year was important at the time |
I don't want people to do anything except admit the inconsistency. And also, explain why a parent is the best judge for whether a child should start school at 5 or 6, but not whether their child should start instead at 7, or 8. Or skip K completely. At what age do parents stop being the best judge and the school begin to be the best judge? Is it the same age for both retention and advancement? Parents arguing for (and against) redshirting often say parents are the best judge. What does that mean? Why in this case and not in others? |
There is. |
| "Almost" doesn't count. |
My guess is that the schools allow parents to make the decision to send kids later but not earlier is that there are some parents out there who would send their kids earlier because it saves them daycare tuition. I'm not saying most parents would do this, but there are some out there who see K as the chance to have six hours of free daycare and so might want to send their October or November birthday kids, even if they are not truly ready. Parents who send their kids a year later are not saving any money by doing so, so the schools see parents holding their kids out as doing what they think is best for their kids. It would be hard for the school to allow parents to decide and end up with many kids in a class who should have waited until the following year. I wrote above about a child born on September 30. When tested by the school, he was found to be unready for and the school counselor encouraged the parent to keep him out till the next year. The parent disregarded this advice and sent him anyway. It was a mistake all around for the child and for his classmates who had to endure his behavior. If parents could choose to send their kids early, some parents would send their kids whether they were ready or not. |
This is a sad story, but it is clearly not typical. Yes, there may be some reasons why children are held back that are not outwardly apparent. But in many cases it is because they want their child to "be a leader" or "be bigger" or "to give them an advantage." I know many who have redshirted for those reasons, and personally I that is unfair to everyone and should not be allowed. At a certain point parents should be required to have their child evaluated if they want to hold them back. Redshirting a May boy because he is slightly immature (what 5 year old boy isn't?!) is ridiculous! |
Believe me it's a problem when 19 and even 20 year olds are living at home and not going off to college. Many of the 19 year boys in my sons senior class are miserable. He is 17 and it feels right. |
No there isn't. It should be 2 months on either end of Sept 1st OR evaluated or special accommodation request (like a PP with a death in the family) to not enter K by 5yrs old. Nothing is more annoying than bragging moms of redshirt kids. |
How about the 18yr old illegal alien sophomore banging the freshman in the hallway during school at Richard Montgomery last year . So gross! |
I know, right? My DD is taller than all the other kids in her grade but isn't even among the oldest half of the class. Can't help but wonder if parents who don't know her age are thinking this about her. |
But if he'd been an 18-year-old Mayflower-descendant senior, it would have been just fine? Also, as far as I know, his residency status was never made public, so it's interesting that you assume that he's an undocumented immigrant. |