
This thread is about 2 ten year olds in a 3rd grade class. Do the math. 20 year old senior. This isn't about everything else. It is about people who are holding back kids to start at 7. |
I didn’t say a 5 or 6 year old cannot handle it, I said it may not be the optimal environment for a 4 or 5 year old — the “on time”’ages— which is why a parents might chose for a kid to start at 6 or 7. If you can find any peer reviewed research supporting our kindergarten structure (indoors almost all day, significant time at desks, very little physical activity) as the optimal environment for those age groups feel free to share it, or of course to send your kids at whatever age you think they should be there. |
Of course it’s fine for them. It’s the parents and preschools that are the problem. |
Or, send our kid and get them the help they need so they don’t struggle. |
That’s holding back twice. A redshirted kid is not starting at 7, he starts at 6. Something else besides redshirting is going on in OP’s class. Maybe kids that failed? International kids who had transfer issues? |
No one is confused that that was an option, one the parents declined. Redshirting plus getting help is the way to go. |
If you think it’s fine for your kid, send them, nothing stops you. Others will make different choices. |
Then why not teach them the very light curriculum at home and enroll them in 1st or 2nd at 7 when you feel they are ready to be in a classroom environment. That seems like an obvious solution and more appropriate for them socially with similar aged peers. |
I’m sure some people choose to do that. I choose to keep my kid in age- appropriate settings with significant outdoor time and physical activity and enrichment until an appropriate age to start full day classroom school, in complete compliance with the regulations where I live. You can choose to send your kid at four if that’s what you think is best for them. |
No one sent their kid at 4. My kid was 5 when he started and he plays outside with neighbors and siblings after school and does a ton of sports. There’s no homework in Kinder. I think you’re a little clueless about I bet your kid just tags along with you on errands and gets screen time a good part of the day. I highly doubt you’re in the forest teaching them. |
If they are really 10 in third grade before 2025 they had to have been retained by the school at least once (if this is in MD.) I redshirted my son with a late summer birthday for K and they gave us a one year waiver and then you are required to enroll in school. They don’t give you more time. My kid started K at just turned 6 and was 6 the whole year and when he’s in third he will be 9 the whole year. |
DP but why are people like you so threatened by these kids in kindergarten? Live and let live. |
I just know people like this and their kids are in their shopping cart at Target, not sitting on a tree stump learning about nature. |
We arrived back in the US after mostly raising kids on military bases abroad and we arrived in August. Honestly I didn’t even know red shirting was a thing until I saw some really big kindergarten kids on my son’s first day of school. So no I did t put my five year old on a waitlist for preschool, had never heard of “junior kindergarten” at preschool, etc. |
So they aren’t exactly raising the standard in class that your kid is struggling to reach. Who cares? |