
\\ Oh, I am sure they are. Wink. |
Okay? Then why do you care so much about the redshirting practices of private schools, which is what OP is complaining about? |
DCUM anti-redshirters are so entertainingly weird. 🤣 |
So this wasn’t you?
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+1 |
Yet you voluntarily pay to be annoyed. Odd. |
Look where you posted this. If you wanted private school sympathy try there. But no doubt you will find those responses annoying too. The common denominator is you. |
Do they have a late birthday? |
If they're already 10 yo and in 3rd grade then of course not. #logic |
This post is perfection! ![]() |
My kid with an August birthday who I sent on time (she started K at 5 but was among the youngest in her grade) was viciously bullied by a redshirted child in 1st grade. My kid was 6 years old for the entirety of 1st grade. The bullying child turned 8 in September and was signficantly bigger and taller. Redshirting played a major role in the bullying because while this one child was the leader, there were many older kids in the classroom due to redshirting and when the bully would attack/provoke my kid, she'd cry, and then all the older kids would round on her and call her a baby and tease her for being small and young (she is average height for her age). I had no idea how prevalent redshirting was when I enrolled my kid in K. She was academically and socially ready for a K classroom full of 5 and 6 year old children. In fact she continues to be at the top of her grade academically and she is well liked by teachers for being a good listener who follows directions and is helpful and kind in the classroom (something that apparently the extra years of preschool or staying home did not help instill in these redshirted kids who are merely bigger and older, not more mature). I absolutely resent that my child's classroom environment has been dominated by older children who I think should have spent their 5/6 year in K learning out to function in elementary school, but instead spent it elsewhere and arrived at elementary school with their own ideas about how school should work. I resent how common bullying and relational aggression are at the school because of these older-but-less-mature kids. Call me a crazy anti-redshirted if you want. I think redshirting sucks. Kids should start school at the same age so that they learn the same skills and are generally at the same developmental level. Kids with developmental delays can/should be held back to accommodate their delays, but it shouldn't be at the parents' discretion. We will be moving school districts before these older kids hit puberty in 3rd grade and we have to deal with that. |
As a parent who doesn't care about redshirting one way or another (and has both middle-of-age-for grade and young-for-grade kids, none old-for-grade): the bullying isn't because your kid is small. Bullies will find literally anything to gang up on kids about. One of my kids was bulled for not watching Spongebob Squarepants in a late elementary grade. Does that make sense as a thing to mock a kid over? No. But my kid was a prickly and kind of hard-to-get-to-know kid, so of course they were a target. The actual thing to make fun of was incidental to the act of piling on. And it's possible (probable?) this older kid is lashing out because: - they do have delays and you have no idea and the delays are social - they feel embarassed about your kid doing as well when they are so much older. |
Sorry your kid was bullied but my old for grade, not redshirted kid was viciously bullied by a young for grade kid. Should I be lashing out at the parents of kids who didn’t hold back? You do in fact sound a little insane to me. Sorry. |
As others have pointed out, a child who turns 8 in the September of first grade isn’t redshirted. That’s like being held back twice. My son will turn 7 September of first grade, so he’s among the oldest in his class. He *is* redshirted because our school cut off is in December - so there are kids who will be entering first grade at 5 and turning 6 in the fall. A child turning 8 years old in first grade is absolutely an outlier and it’s hard to imagine parents thinking it’s an advantage to being a a year - two older than the rest of the class. |
So you think having a 10 yr old in 3rd grade is somehow advantageous to them? I mean…if they already have mastered 3rd grade material they are essentially learning nothing new- at all. How is this “getting ahead?” News flash, this isn’t how you get ahead.
The gifted and talented program where I live and in many districts aren’t capped. Whatever kids have qualifying scores and the necessary recommendations can participate. You are are really creating a problem where there isn’t one. My second grader goes to small school in a combined 1st-3rd grade class. There are zero issues. |