Anonymous wrote:I was in a school system like this with a December birthday. It was TERRIBLE always being the youngest. To compound matters, I was advanced and ended up skipping a grade. I graduated at 16. No 16-year-old should be allowed to go to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you in Connecticut?
I have a cousin who lives in Connecticut. Remarkably 4 of her 5 brainiac children have January birthdays. Her one "normal" kid was born in November. Drives my cousin crazy.
Why does that drive her crazy ??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The opposite of redshirting is early entry, not trying to have your children at the end of the school eligibility year because day care is expensive.
She ended up being a SAHM when she had the first one.
She just didn't want to have to parent longer than necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you in Connecticut?
I have a cousin who lives in Connecticut. Remarkably 4 of her 5 brainiac children have January birthdays. Her one "normal" kid was born in November. Drives my cousin crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school cut off for bdays here is Jan 1-Dec 31. So all kids in the same grade are born in the same year. I don't know any kids that have been redshirted here.
Anyway, all this redshirting talk reminded me of this. My sister planned to have her kids in Oct, Nov or Dec because they would be home less with her, less daycare cost if she used daycare. She couldn't wait to have her kids in school asap.
She thought having a kid in January was stupid, when you could have one in December and they would both start school at the same time.
Looking back it was indicative of certain things with her
Your situation is your situation, but this strikes me as really unfair. If I could plan to have a child in a month that would save me THOUSANDS of dollars, I would most certainly consider it. That benefits the kid too, you know. It's really not that different than teachers planning to have a baby in April/May/June to minimize maternity leave taken.
Anonymous wrote:The opposite of redshirting is early entry, not trying to have your children at the end of the school eligibility year because day care is expensive.
Anonymous wrote:The school cut off for bdays here is Jan 1-Dec 31. So all kids in the same grade are born in the same year. I don't know any kids that have been redshirted here.
Anyway, all this redshirting talk reminded me of this. My sister planned to have her kids in Oct, Nov or Dec because they would be home less with her, less daycare cost if she used daycare. She couldn't wait to have her kids in school asap.
She thought having a kid in January was stupid, when you could have one in December and they would both start school at the same time.
Looking back it was indicative of certain things with her
Anonymous wrote:Are you in Connecticut?
Anonymous wrote:I was in a school system like this with a December birthday. It was TERRIBLE always being the youngest. To compound matters, I was advanced and ended up skipping a grade. I graduated at 16. No 16-year-old should be allowed to go to college.