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Elementary School-Aged Kids
Reply to "Why don’t schools have stronger policies about redshirting? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]If you redshirt your kids, the other kids will figure out what age your child is (most likely your child will simply tell them) and therefore their parents will too. It's less that people are cataloguing the ages and birthdays of every child and more that when you encounter an 8 year old in 1st or a 10 yr old in 3rd, it is notable, and kids and adults alike will share that info. The fact that people discover this does not make them creepy stalkers. Again, usually this information is learned from the child themselves when they tell other kids what their age is, which is a very normal thing for kids to share with one another. You can't control other people finding out and you can't control how they will feel about it when they do. Proceed accordingly.[/quote] +1, most talk about it and are proud to be old [/quote] Exactly. It's often a point of pride for kids in younger grades to be the oldest, so the redshirted kids get revealed very quickly. This can also be where the resentment starts, if you've got a redshirted kid in the classroom boasting about being the oldest. It's meaningless but it draws attention to it in a negative way. If you redshirt, talk to your kids about how being a year older or younger isn't important. Make sure they understand that being older doesn't make them better, and find a way to explain why you redshirted that doesn't put other kids down. You don't want your redshirted kid lording it over other children.[/quote] TBH it's more likely that they will be uncomfortable and self conscious about being older than everyone else, like they're too old to be in the grade they're in. [/quote] Let us know how it goes when the other children make fun of your kid for being too old to be in his or her grade. [/quote] Because it will never happen. [/quote] said the person who has literally never met a child[/quote] How would the kids know what “too old” was unless psycho mom had a sit down and talked about it? Real kids only care about who’s birthday is next and if they are going to the party.[/quote] This is a strange world you live in where the moms know the ages of literally hundreds of children at their kids' schools, but the kids have no idea how old anyone is or what grade you're supposed to be in each grade. [/quote] There is no correct age per grade since school year isn’t the calendar year. Kids have birthdays all year round.[/quote] Have fun explaining that to all the kids at school. [/quote] Do you have any kids in school? It’s a non issue.[/quote] Pfft. If you have a kid who is older than some children in the grade ahead of them, the other kids will sniff that out in about three seconds and the entire grade will know within days. Some will think it's cool. Some won't care. Some will ask what is wrong with you. [/quote] The redshirted kid with be a year older than their peers forever. Elementary school. Middle school. High school. College. It will always be an issue, to varying degrees. [/quote] You do realize that college students vary wildly in age, right? Kids take a gap year between HS and college. Kids transfer colleges and their credits might not always transfer exactly. They take a year off for health reasons, or they join the military and have to take time off for training or because they actually get deployed. Or they have a kid! Allll kinds of stuff happens. Even throughout K-12 school, different areas have different cutoffs. The places that start school early in early-mid August in the Midwest and the South often have 7/30 cutoffs. The August and September birthday kids (and there are a lot, these are some of the most common birthdays of the year) didn’t meet the cutoff where they started school. [/quote] Ok, Spock, but were you never a child? It's easy to say "'don't sweat it" when you're a middle aged parent with the benefit of experience and hindsight and you don't actually have to do it. Not sweating it though is an altogether different matter when you're young and in the thick of it. If you can't see why a child would be self conscious about being older than all of their peers, then I don't know what to tell you other than you're just being willfully blind. [/quote] Hey Ashley, this is a you problem and nothing else.[/quote] I know it's probably hard, if you're a parent redshirting a child, to acknowledge that you're causing a lot more problems for your kid than you're solving (and so unnecessarily!), but don't say no one warned you. [/quote] Redshirting has been a thing in affluent areas at least since I was in elementary school in the 90s. Show any data about its “problems” please.[/quote] Not in our area. I don’t care either way but people should be honest. I have two kids born in March and June and one kid born in November. The spring birthday kids started preschool at 3 years old, then a second year of preschool (prekindergarten) at 4 years old. There was nothing left for them to learn at that level and they were mature. They would have been so bored repeating pre-k, I can’t imagine. The next step was kindergarten, a step they were more than qualified to take. If I had a child with any kind of delays or difficulties I would have held them back no problem. But I don’t get how a child who is academically advanced at this young age could survive being stuck repeating a year. [/quote] What year would they be repeating? Preschools now have their own PreK or Transitional K class just for these kids.[/quote] Preschool, pre-K then transitional K? Way too much preparation for the typical bright child. That is one year too many for the majority of children [/quote]
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