
If a child is being held back for social, emotional or academic reasons the parents shoudl be forced to have them in services to get them caught up. Any issue should be addressed and not ignored and hoping that waiting a year will fix it. These kids who are held back are not age appropiate as they are being compared to much younger kids, so they are much more immature than someone on grade level and they will not have the opportunity to truely catch up as the oldest. |
The discussion is about peers and a child held back isn't necessarily going to be a leader just because they are older. It harms everyone and when you get to HS, do you want your 14 year old in classes with 19-20 year olds as that is whats happening. |
You’re right, a child who is redshirted isn’t necessarily going to be a leader and— parents who are redshirting aren’t always doing it for that reason anyway. So don’t worry about the redshirted kids. You seem to be suggesting a freshman in high school could be taking classes with a senior— while the 20 y/o would be shockingly rare, it’s not more worrying to have a 19 than an 18 y/o senior. What is your panic about here? |
Parents shouldn’t be forced to put their kids in developmentally inappropriate environments. Come with peer reviewed studies that the best environment for a five year old is to sit for hours indoors, with (maybe) a 30 minute outdoor recess, or accept that other people will choose differently for their children. |
Forced? Forced by whom? The schools who benefit by having more mature kids causing fewer problems in the youngest grades? The same schools stretched thin who can't even provide all the services they are already obligated to provide and aren't? Just so your little boy doesn't get picked last for the basketball team because he's shorter and less coordinated? Good luck! |
Eh, his birthday is in September and pretty borderline. Most private cut offs in my area are 9/1, so he would’ve been the oldest anyway, but ours happens to be later. He’s a thin kid, average height, not athletic and doesn’t really stand out physically. For my son it was an easy decision. I also have a daughter with a November birthday (we’re in New York) who would enter kindergarten at 4 going on 5, and not sure what we’ll do for her. She doesn’t have the same behavioral challenges my son has, but just hate the late cut off in New York - which only public schools and a handful of privates still go by - and prefer a transitional 5s program for the turning 5 year since it offers more balance of play and academics. The standard for kindergarten nationally has become 5 turning 6, not 4 turning 5 like both of my kids birthdays would have designated - we’re just in a weird very local situation. |
After many years of watching these threads, I’ve come to the conclusion that the anti-redshirt posters don’t have a lot of executive function and haven’t encountered much adversity in life. Therefore, this is one of the first times where they realize they had to do some work on their own, and as they don’t have a lot of other adversity in their lives, they blow this up into a major problem, which of course it isn’t. It’s just fascinating to watch. |
Parent of young for grade high school kid here. 👋 I literally could not care less about whether my kid is in classes with older teens. And my friends with redshirted kids (who are thriving) don’t care either, the other way. The only people who care about this are badly socialized adults who can’t teach social skills to their kids. That’s it. |
Similarly did this. My child’s entire 4th grade (65 kids) has only 22 boys. |
Even if you are correct, that doesn't address the problem of older (red-shirted) kids bullying younger kids (who went on time) in the same grade. Its only when red-shirted kids cause problems for the younger kids in their grade that anyone cares. Surely you can see that. |
This. If I'd had the resources to homeschool or private school my kid in K, I would have taken it. She is young for her grade and sensitive, and K was a tough transition because her public school did not emphasize outdoor time, play, physical movement, etc. It was a LOT of sitting and listening. It wasn't age appropriate and we all kind of hated it. But I don't wish I'd redshirted her because even though that environment wasn't great, she's on or above grade level academically and I think it's ideal to have her in a classroom with same age peers. Yes she's on the young side but so are some of the other kids. If she were redshirted she'd be the oldest in class. So yeah if I could have sent her to an outdoor-focused K program, maybe even K and 1st (though actually our 1st grade teacher was phenomenal and really emphasized outdoor time and by then DD was really ready for the academic focus), I might have done it just because I hate how publics handle kinder. But that doesn't mean it would be a good idea for her to go all the way through school with a younger cohort. That's not the right group for her to be in -- she should be with other kids her age. I just wish all the kids got a gentler K experience and we would have happily skipped it if we could afford to, but then we would have transferred her into her age-appropriate class in public. |
It’s it rare at all. Electives, gym, health ed and math are always mixed. My 13-14 year old freshman had three classes with seniors freshman year. An elective that was auditioned in, pe and math. |
Of course it’s age appropriate. It’s school, not preschool. You and her preschool did not prepare her. |
Now there is bullying? So many made up issues and moving of the goal posts. |
I care as it’s not developmentally appropriate and huge differences between a 13-14 year and a 16-20 year old. Some older kids are great and some are really mean and bullies. |