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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "Why is redshirting so rare if it's so advantageous?"
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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]I’m redshirting my July daughter [/quote] Ditto. She's 4 and my youngest child and she's not happy about that. She's always the youngest in the class too and she's more immature. Another year of childhood seems like a great gift to give her.[/quote] She isn't less mature. You are not comparing her to her actual peers and kids a year younger. You are doing it for her, not you. You aren't giving her an extra year of childhood. You are taking away a year of being an adult and forcing them to continue being a child.[/quote] It's not robbing them of a year of adulthood, it's making sure they are as ready and a prepared as they can be to get the most out of their education. It's not a race.[/quote] I agree that education isn't a race. You know how you sometimes hear about a 12-or-13-year-old heading off to college? It's the parents of [i]those[/i] kids who view education as a race, not the parents of the kids starting college a few weeks shy of their 18th birthdays.[/quote] So, if I have a late August vs. late September child/birthday, what exactly is the difference between a month? You may be robbing them of a year of adulthood by forcing them to be kids an extra year when they are 18/adults.[/quote] You have only a few years of childhood, it's precious and fleeting, but decades of being an adult. Who needs another year of working, bills, taxes, and stress? Most people given the choice would likely prefer another year of being a carefree child.[/quote] Speak for yourself, but I felt embarrassed about still being in "childhood" when most of my peers had moved on to "adulthood".[/quote] The vast majority of kids don't turn out like you. [/quote] That's the very reason for my embarrassment. I would be just fine with how I've turned out had I not been part of a group that generally does extremely well. I'd be in good company. But as it is, I am in a group in which I am one of the only people, if not the only person, to not excel. I haven't lived up to the expectations of the group I'm in.[/quote] Holding back does not change motivation, IQ, and all that stuff so if you were held back, there is no guarantee you would have excelled more. Some of it is personality, some of it is IQ, some of it is parenting, some of it is genetics, and or other factors and a combination of those things. You cannot change a child's IQ. You are not giving your child an extra year of childhood by holding them back. [/quote]
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