| I didn’t redshirt my May boys and they are the dead youngest. It’s annoying and I hate it but they are sound fine. |
| You’ll regret it. Give him the gift of a year. |
Oh well. Better your kid is the smallest and youngest than mine. And school starts early August where i live. Still no regrets. |
| Anyone who is answering this before their kids are HS age is giving premature feedback. Middle school / HS is when the reasons for potential regrets (if present) will become show up |
Because there are zero drawbacks to red shirting, that’s why. |
| I never regretted it until high school. As mentioned above, reassess at ninth grade. |
Agree. Kindergarten readiness doesn’t accurately predict what life will look like for them in 6th grade and beyond. It’s a hard decision bc there isn’t any way to know, especially if things seem fine when they are 4-5 yrs old. |
| Middle school now and so glad we redshirted. Omg there is no question |
| You described our exact scenario when DS was approaching K long ago. We debated because everyone had us doubting, but he was so socially and emotionally mature and was looking forward to going so we took the chance. We never looked back. He actually always gravitated towards the older kids in the classroom. Now he’s a college sophomore, on the deans list each semester and very responsible. He was so ready to go and while I miss him a lot, he definitely didn’t need another year at home. Trust your gut. You know your son best. |
The rare exception. |
Actually there can be. My niece struggled a lot emotionally with being red shirted. I understand why her parents delayed K. She was a sweet and silly preschooler who liked to play and they didn’t want her stressed by K. But by 1st grade she was aware she was the oldest and it bothered her. She is now in HS and still complaining that she wishes she were a grade ahead. Socially she really didn’t find her people until HS when she was able to be in classes with older kids. |
|
My DS is a May birthday (on the younger side in his class but not so young we considered redshirting) and currently a freshman in HS.
No academic issues or problems in elementary. As a few others have noted, puberty can be a bit of an X factor. My DS has been very late to puberty and middle school was quite rough socially. He is just hitting puberty now. Now- my DS would’ve been a late bloomer either way, middle school is rough for many, and that stage is but a blip on the radar in the grand scheme. All true. However, his self esteem and social confidence has definitely suffered. An extra year would’ve been a help to him in that way. I’m not sure how much that will matter in the big picture, but at this particular moment in time it matters a lot. Just something to consider. |
You aren't gifting a year. You are delaying being an adult and college for a year, which meets your needs, not theirs. If they are delayed, get them help. OP is saying her child is on target and there is zero reason to delay. We caved into the pressure with our September child. Child ended up skipping a grade early on as it wasn't the right choice. Parents do it as it's easier for them. Teachers push it as it's easier on them. You cannot gift time or maturity. Holding back does not make them less mature. It lowers the expectations so your child isn't being compared to kids their own age so they look artificially more mature than they really are. |
Sounds like she would be miserable no matter what. |
+1 I’d suggest asking on the teen/tween board or general parenting (or a doing a search- perhaps has been asked already) |