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"Don't be so mean to this poor mom!!! It's kind of hard not to be type a about your child if you are type a.
1- he isn't average he is reading at the normal age. All the boys here are kept back in k because it isn't dev correct for them to read so early. Solution is to keep him back a year. Everyone does this and he will be bigger for sports so that's a plus. 2- you need some other arena to compete in so it takes some of the pressure off the child rearing. I didn't do this and I wish I had. You will need something to do in 15 years when he leaves do start part time now. Good luck and thanks for being a dedicated mom- it's an important job and your child will benefit hugely from it. " Idiot! |
| Just because he isn't reading doesn't mean he's not intelligent. There are all different types of intelligence. I presume you have spoken to his teacher and he/she has told you that your child is fine. |
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I sincerely hope this is a troll post. If real, I do feel bad for the kid(s) because it must be a pressure cooker there. Give up on forced learning and give in to experiental fun. Kid will be better off.
FWIW, my son was not really reading much at all in K or at the beginning of first grade. He was evaluated in K for gifted programming based on non-reading factors and his reported IQ was 140+. Onset of reading is not a great indicator of ultimate ability. He is just now as a first grader beginning to read. We are not disappointed in him at all. He's an awesome kid. |
You can't be for real. WTH does your DH's income have to do with anything? This has to be a joke. If not, your kid has bigger problems than the ones you are focused on. |
Actually, private schools are. Luckily, the OP has plenty of money so you and she can hang out and convince yourselves that you are ensuring your kid's future success by throwing money at the issue. |
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You've heard of regression to the mean, right?
"Regression to the mean, also known as regression toward the mean, was discovered by Sir Francis Galton while he was conducting reporting the heights of 250 parents and their 930 children. Galton calculated the average height for the adults and children and plotted the heights of everyone on a chart. Galton found that the children of parents who were taller than average tended to have children that were taller than average, and the parents who were shorter than average tended to have children who were shorter on average. However, in instances where the parents were taller than than average, the children tended to be a bit shorter than the parents and in instances where the parents were shorter than average, the children tended to be a bit taller than the parents. In other words, the children of parents with heights that were extremely above or below average had heights that were closer to the average. Galton called this phenomenon regression of the mean ." OP- Did you really think that your child would be just as intelligent or more intelligent that two extremely intelligent parents? |
Yeah baby! I like you. |
OP's (and your) only failure is to succumb to the illusion that a parent can fully or even to a significant extent determine academic outcomes for a child. You can help realize potential, but the limits are set by nature. |
Look, we haven't done any of those things. I mean seriously none. Well except lots of books. My kid started reading at 3. He just did. It just happened. I don't know if he's gifted or not. I don't think you know that your son isn't either. When he's ready it will click and given his family and his background he'll likely race ahead. (ps before he started to read, when he was about 2.5 I remember feeling inadequate because he didn't know his colors and was behind in speech and all the other kids seemed so advanced. A year later, when he was clearly happy and learning and starting to read I realized how stupid that disappointment and feeling of inadequacy was). |
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| OP, maybe he is gifted. My son didn't read until he was 6 and out of kindergarten. He is gifted, with the scores and HGC/magnet schools to show it. He's much older now, of course. It's not a race, seriously. (Not that it matters, but I have a BA from a second-tier state school. So does my DH.) |
Your disappointment? Honestly, he should be the one who is disappointed in having shallow douches for parents. Jesus. |
Sending prayers your way. |
OP, your child is a person, not a project. |
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Kids are ready to read at different times. My kids were late readers and one is gifted. I know many early readers who ended up being just average students later. It means nothing.
Love your child for who he is. Your disappointment is far more harmful to his future happiness than average intelligence. |