Or when your oldest-student-in-the-class turns out to be way worse at math than a kid who is a year and a half younger than them. |
There is no correct age per grade since school year isn’t the calendar year. Kids have birthdays all year round. |
Have fun explaining that to all the kids at school. |
That’s the spirit! Never too young to start bullying. |
Do you have any kids in school? It’s a non issue. |
I think there’s some of this…but in my experience it’s a little more nuanced than that. COVID said that parents needed to do the work of teachers/schools. Well, this is a type-A, do the research and cite your source kind of place. So a lot of parents did that research and decided that 4-5 isn’t considered by much of the developed world to be the optimal time to start school, that outdoor play and socio-emotional development at that stage is more beneficial, and are acting accordingly. |
Wouldn’t that suggest the parents had made the right choice? |
Pfft. If you have a kid who is older than some children in the grade ahead of them, the other kids will sniff that out in about three seconds and the entire grade will know within days. Some will think it's cool. Some won't care. Some will ask what is wrong with you. |
No. I don't assume math ability correlates with age like that. |
Weird fantasy. |
No, I don't think so, not in K. Being older is currency for young kids. I've never heard of a kid being called "too old" at the K or 1st level. I think older kids can feel self conscious about it, especially if they are noticeably bigger/older than other kids but not necessarily better at school or sports. This is a reason I wouldn't redshirt past maybe August/July. I wouldn't want my kid starting puberty a year earlier than peers -- that can be really tough and kids that age are much meaner than younger kids. I think you have to be careful with it. Redshirting a February kid makes no sense to me. At that point if I had a kid with developmental delays or immaturity, I'd still enroll on time but be getting an eval and IEP to address deficits, and working with the school. I don't think you can solve immaturity issues with a kid that old via redshirting. |
Not necessarily. Some kids are just not good at math. Redshirting doesn't necessarily make that better. If it makes social stuff easier, then it's still a good idea. If it makes the social stuff harder, then the fact that they are also struggling academically will compound that and you might wonder if they would have been better off in an older peer group where they would be less of an outlier. Kids want to fit in, so whatever choice facilitates that is probably best. It can be hard to gauge when your kid is 4 though. |
Early puberty is a huge bonus for boys. It’s not tough at all. Plus puberty doesn’t correspond exactly to chronological age anyway. I have a 15 yr old late bloomer boy. |
Agree kids figure it out. Kids usually know which other kids are older and younger than they are. My kids often tell me which peers have birthdays closest to theirs, or who just turned 8 or whatever. Age is really important to kids because it's so closely linked to how much freedom they get, what privileges they have access to, etc. But disagree kids will "ask what is wrong with you." The vast majority won't and the ones that do are the kids who will find any reason to criticize. The kid making fun of a redshirted child will also make fun of the youngest kid in class for being young. |
It depends what it looks like. If it's an awkward transition, going through it before others can be stressful. Yes, boys will benefit from a growth spurt and filling out. Getting facial hair earlier, dealing with vocal changes, etc., can be very embarrassing if classmates are nowhere close. Your kid was a late bloomer, but some are early bloomers and redshirting can make that hard. Early puberty is really tough on girls. Visible physical changes are often viewed negatively or garner unwanted attention. Being the first to menstruate can be tough too. Of course there's a spectrum but I wouldn't redshirt a spring birthday in part because I wouldn't want to risk this. Summer birthdays are different. They are in the bubble IMO. |