Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL! My oldest was never ready then.
There are plenty I saw in kindergarten who detracted from the class in a way that hindered the learning of others. In my opinion, those kids were immature for kindergarten. They may belong in it ageowise or knowledgewise, but perhaps not maturity wise. The kid who knew her colors in my DD's kindergarten class but could not stop touching my DD's barrettes, thighs, shoes, head, ponytail, etc., who could not stop getting her snack whenever she wanted, could not stop talking when the teacher asked her not to, and could not follow simple directions (I.e. "Time to leave art now, please line up." And the kid was ignoring the teacher, taking the paint out again and getting new paper because she didn't want to leave art.). Kid is not mature enough for kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:Hmm. My son could sit, listen to stories, follow the teacher's instructions, not hit or push, but he was still immature for K. He could not handle conflicts with friends, deal with kids who were not nice, or losing at sports and spent a lot of K crying and being upset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL! My oldest was never ready then.
There are plenty I saw in kindergarten who detracted from the class in a way that hindered the learning of others. In my opinion, those kids were immature for kindergarten. They may belong in it ageowise or knowledgewise, but perhaps not maturity wise. The kid who knew her colors in my DD's kindergarten class but could not stop touching my DD's barrettes, thighs, shoes, head, ponytail, etc., who could not stop getting her snack whenever she wanted, could not stop talking when the teacher asked her not to, and could not follow simple directions (I.e. "Time to leave art now, please line up." And the kid was ignoring the teacher, taking the paint out again and getting new paper because she didn't want to leave art.). Kid is not mature enough for kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:I think by kindergarten a child should
Know colors and shapes
Recognize letters and numbers
Write his name
Be able to sit and follow directions
Converse well with peers and adults
Dress himself
Feed himself
Say please and thank you unprompted
Share when appropriate
Clean up after himself
Display empathy and care for others (should be at the top of the list probably)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL! My oldest was never ready then.
There are plenty I saw in kindergarten who detracted from the class in a way that hindered the learning of others. In my opinion, those kids were immature for kindergarten. They may belong in it ageowise or knowledgewise, but perhaps not maturity wise. The kid who knew her colors in my DD's kindergarten class but could not stop touching my DD's barrettes, thighs, shoes, head, ponytail, etc., who could not stop getting her snack whenever she wanted, could not stop talking when the teacher asked her not to, and could not follow simple directions (I.e. "Time to leave art now, please line up." And the kid was ignoring the teacher, taking the paint out again and getting new paper because she didn't want to leave art.). Kid is not mature enough for kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is considered immature vs. ready?
Can sit for stories
Follows commands
Respectful of self, others (personal space, doesn't back talk an adult)
Separates from mom
Can accept no from an adult
Anonymous wrote:LOL! My oldest was never ready then.
Anonymous wrote:What is considered immature vs. ready?