![]() |
I’m 10.5 months younger than my sister.
I highly recommend determining when to start each kid entirely independently of one another to the maximum degree possible. Treat them as individuals. Will they be asked if they are twins…absolutely. But surely you’ve already been asked that and they are going to be asked that a million times more in their lives regardless of grade placement. Make the right decision for each of them as an individual. |
Yes, for DC, straight to first. That is what I read in the news. This kind of enforcement is new, but supposed to be in effect for the upcoming school year. DC has free pre-k, so I don't think most families would be blindsided, as they would be registered for the correct school year during preschool registration. |
Send one to a boy's school and one to a girl's school. |
+1 Don’t do this. They (and you) will get constant questions about this for the next 12+ years, and people will assume there is something “wrong” with your son if he is in the same grade as his younger sister. Sorry to put it that way, but it is the truth. Whatever start date you choose, put them in separate grades for sure. They will be glad you did, later on. Being in the same grade as different aged sibling is just bizarre. |
This is what I would do |
Your kids are not Irish twins and honestly we should retire that phrase as it is offensive to people of Irish descent. |
Bunch of articles this week on no more redshirting in WDC so easy google search of want to read more about it. Bottom line: “Any child aged 6 years old by September 30 would be required to attend first grade, officials said, according to WJLA, even if they had not attended kindergarten.” May be other places too but 1 article online says NYC and public Chicago schools don’t allow and Oklahoma has restrictions. |
Of course you should redshirt her. Why would you put them in the same grade if you have a choice? |
I have a boy and girl close in age and they are in the same grade. They have always been at schools with at least two classes per grade so they have been in separate classes. Most people assume they are twins and the kids decided if they want to explain or not. They are now going to high school and agree that they sometimes just say they are twins. They have been at different schools for the past two academic years as the middle school we started with was a good fit for one, but not entirely for the other. They have liked having overlapping friend circles, but that would still be possible if they were in different grades. Just to say there are some cases where it worked out fine to be in the same grade. My daughter is the older, so we have run into some instances where she feels responsible for her brother’s behavior, but I think that would be the older sister mentality same grade or not. |
The question here is really whether to redshirt your DD or not. What is best for her given those two options?
Imagine that you are your DD- if asked HER opinion later on about on what you should have done, how do you imagine she would respond? When she is a senior in HS? When she is 35? Truly put yourself in her shoes. And go with that. The answer here is extremely obvious, IMHO— unless there are special considerations with either child that you have not mentioned. |
Ask yourself the same question of DS too. If the answers fall the same lucky you. |
Maybe the boy will be glad. His sister surely won’t be. It’s likely that she’ll wonder she was held back. Heaven help you if she figures it out and starts telling people her parents held her back so her brother wouldn’t feel stupid. |
Make sure they’re in different classrooms if they go at the same time. |
Yes! There were a couple news articles about this. Kids at a preschool where parents frequently redshirted were placed directly into first grade and skipped kindergarten completely. Parents were pissed |