I'm worried that I rendered my parents' sacrifice of paying for an extra year of daycare useless by not graduating from college in less than 3.5 years. |
It's very rare to take five years, except for specialized programs or disabilities. |
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My GREENSHIRTED kid who had missed the kindergarten admission cut-off date by 2 weeks and who took an "early entrance to kindergarten" test to prove to school administrators that he was ready to start school early - did very well in school and in college.
Yes, he was only 17 when he started college, and only 21 when he graduated and started a job - but, he took 4 years to finish his double major in STEM. |
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People take different paths to the same outcome.
A friend's kid (who went to KG on time) graduated in 3 years with a double major in math and CS. A few weeks after graduation, he moved halfway across the country to start his job. He was likely 21 but could have been 20. |
My kid was redshirted and I literally never gave this a thought |
Fall kids are not held back, they miss the cut off which is different. Spring and summer are held back. Kids can be turning 19. |
Did he have at-least a year of college credit upon graduating high school? |
yes. It is normal. There is no correlation or causation between the two, but it is normal like it is for every other kid to take at least 3.5 years to graduate from college. |
I don't understand people who respond to threads just to brag. What does this have to do with OP's question (which also didn't make any sense to start?) |
No one is starting their 7 year old in kindergarten and there are no 20 year old 12th graders. We red shirted, which meant she started K just after her 6th birthday. She turned 18 just before starting 12th grade and was still 18 when she graduated. Just like the overwhelming majority of HS graduates. |
Turning 19 when? They will only turn 19 before senior year if they are held back twice, which no one does in the ordinary course of things. |
Not all redshirted kids are Aug/Sept kids. Some may be April or May birthdates, so yes, they could be turning 19 at the end of their senior year. But there are no 20 year old seniors unless redshirted plus held back later, or held back twice. |
| I’d say 3 years has become the norm now, because college has become a lot easier due to COVID. |
What’s the point of worrying about that? It’s in the past. You can’t change it. |
This is very common now. My kid says there are tons of kids graduating with MS in 4 years. |