What was the cutoff back then? We are talking about an August birthday/September 1 cutoff here |
Is it too much to ask for basic math skills in these posts? |
Apparently |
Whoops, didn’t mean to put a ? at the end. |
Right, but I was even younger and still did fine. I’m saying it’s possible that young kids do fine, and isn’t always the catastrophe that some people seem to be worried about here. |
My sister graduated HS at 17. It was fine. I'm not redshirting my Sept birthday boy. |
+1 Despite what they claim, this is all absolutely about having their child be one of the strongest (or at least not the weakest), relatively speaking. They cheat to try to ensure that there will always be kids below their own. It’s disgusting. |
My son who turned seven in September started second grade at 6 with a classmate who was 8. |
I know a number of kids turning nine in May or June. In 2nd grade class with classmates who are seven until later in the summer. Just prentice in the part of the parents, and the kids are talking. |
We did not because she was ready. DD is now in middle school and the youngest in her class. She is in private. Socially fine and academically 4.0 GPA and way above grade level according to standardized test scores. No regrets and she can do a gap year and still be on track for college graduation.
BFF has late August DS. They sent him to school on time but decided to repeat K due to social skills. |
That should say pathetic on the part of the parents. |
Exactly. She turns 15 on the same day as a girl in the grade above her. Not a good look. |
Yep or all summer like my kid. |
To the OP: We seriously considered redshirting my late august DD and I drove myself nuts reading research supporting both sides. The last article I read was anti-redshirting saying that holding back a child wasn't helpful academically--I don't remember exactly what they said, but it somehow stuck in my mind that I would be doing my daughter a disservice academically. In preK my daughter was smart, but always the smallest in her cohort, shy, timid and easily overpowered by her bossier classmates. I feared for her ability to handle the social aspect of school and to make friends. She is now in 3rd grade and continues to excel in public school, is being considered for the gifted program, and is achieving in a competitive sport. However, she is still the smallest in her class (but not the youngest!), still easily overrun by her louder classmates and has not managed to make many friends. I don't regret our decision and my feeling is that even if we held her back, she would still struggle with making friends and her self confidence. If I was a different kind of mom--one who could commit to providing educational activities at home or who was willing to put my daughter in a very good full day preschool or even a private school, then I probably would have felt fine redshirting. To add to this, I am also a late august birthday and was also always the smallest and youngest in my class, but I excelled academically and was always quiet and socially awkward. I suffered no lasting trauma and even survived middle school relatively unscathed! I eventually found my way and turned out just fine. Good luck deciding! |
But there would be kids born just a couple weeks after her in the same grade, most likely in addition to other redshirt kids |