Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an mcps k teacher. I will not give details regarding the assessment. I will say that in order to pass your child needs to demonstrate end of kindergarten proficiency levels. In addition he will need to show that he is emotionally and socially ready. He will need to separate from you with ease during the assessment. He will need to engage with the teachers and other children. He will need to begin, sustain attention to and complete a non-proffered task.
If you believe he can do these things, or you’re not sure and want him assessed, make an appointment with the homeschool in the spring.
If the team agrees that he is ready, great. If they don’t, he does another year of prek.
Good luck.
It's bizarre to me that the early entrance assessment is based on end of year meteucsm if you have an almost 4 year old who is testing at the end of kindergarten then by that logic they'd be readyfir first grade
Anonymous wrote:I am an mcps k teacher. I will not give details regarding the assessment. I will say that in order to pass your child needs to demonstrate end of kindergarten proficiency levels. In addition he will need to show that he is emotionally and socially ready. He will need to separate from you with ease during the assessment. He will need to engage with the teachers and other children. He will need to begin, sustain attention to and complete a non-proffered task.
If you believe he can do these things, or you’re not sure and want him assessed, make an appointment with the homeschool in the spring.
If the team agrees that he is ready, great. If they don’t, he does another year of prek.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:I just made the cutoff and would have been one of the youngest in my grade, so my parents held me back a year. My bff just missed the cutoff and her parents enrolled her a year early. We have a 13 month age difference, but we were supposed to be 2 grades apart. I’ve thanked God many times that we ended up together. We both turned out great.
If you start your son early, you’ll pay for one less year of private kindergarten, have him living at home with you for one less year, and he will enter the workforce one year earlier. He will drive later than a lot of his friends. He’ll be more likely to go through puberty later than classmates.
If you stick to the cutoff, he’ll live under your roof longer. He’ll be among the first of his friends to drive. He may have facial hair before his classmates.
If he’s really strong academically, he’ll be bored in school no matter what you do. If he’s immature, it may be better to stick to the cutoff. If he’s very mature, it may be better to send him early.
The odds are that he’ll probably be just fine either way.
Anonymous wrote:I had a friend try in Loudon County, the child had to essentially be at near first grade levels in order to start K early. Even though the child did very well on the evaluation he was given, the friend reported missing one or two questions, he was not allowed to start K early. They enrolled the child in a private K and then moved him the following year to first grade in LCPS. I have had friends do the same thing in FCPS.