Anonymous wrote:Four grades between each kid. Pros - the obvious of not having two in college at the same time. Also, as the older ones get older, you have time to really focus on helping them get ready for adulthood - job hunting, school visits, etc., because you only have one to focus on at a time. Cons - parenting for a very long time, youngest is quite precocious due to constant exposure to high school kids by first grade, slow down in activity at around age 5-7 for youngest (too big for a backpack or stroller and not physically capable of keeping up with the rest of us. But, overall, the spacing works for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if there's an ideal but I have definitely formed a preference.
I have 8th, 6th and 2nd. The spacing works for us although the 8th and 2nd grader are clearly interested in very different things. My middle moves seamlessly between them but that is probably just his personality.
I knew I wanted my kids at least 2 grades apart. My sister and I were just one grade apart and I hated it because there was competition and I always felt inferior. Not as old, not as fast, not as smart, not as coordinated...and then there was the competition for friends (bad in the early years and again in HS). My mom thought we'd be best friends being close in age. I think it actually backfired.
In our circle, I've seen it work for some and not for others. It's especially rough on those with parents that decide it's a good idea to put their kids into activities/on teams together. We have 3 pairs of siblings on one of my son's teams. Makes it easy for the parents but so hard for the kids. In once case, the younger sib can't keep up and is miserable. In another, the younger sib outplays the older and the older gets upset. I also know two families where the younger child is ahead of the older in school and the older's self-esteem has taken a hit.
Of course, you can avoid the extracurricular competition by steering your kids to different activities and not signing them up together. Not much you can do about the academic piece though.
I have two sons who will be three years apart in school even though they are 2 1/2 years apart in age – April and November birthdays. They are young now but I was a bit bummed at first thinking about how theyd have fewer friends in common, fewer siblings in the same years etc. than if they were two years apart. The sports thing gave me something to think about though. The smaller one is already tracking bigger than the older, so I can see now this could be a good thing.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if there's an ideal but I have definitely formed a preference.
I have 8th, 6th and 2nd. The spacing works for us although the 8th and 2nd grader are clearly interested in very different things. My middle moves seamlessly between them but that is probably just his personality.
I knew I wanted my kids at least 2 grades apart. My sister and I were just one grade apart and I hated it because there was competition and I always felt inferior. Not as old, not as fast, not as smart, not as coordinated...and then there was the competition for friends (bad in the early years and again in HS). My mom thought we'd be best friends being close in age. I think it actually backfired.
In our circle, I've seen it work for some and not for others. It's especially rough on those with parents that decide it's a good idea to put their kids into activities/on teams together. We have 3 pairs of siblings on one of my son's teams. Makes it easy for the parents but so hard for the kids. In once case, the younger sib can't keep up and is miserable. In another, the younger sib outplays the older and the older gets upset. I also know two families where the younger child is ahead of the older in school and the older's self-esteem has taken a hit.
Of course, you can avoid the extracurricular competition by steering your kids to different activities and not signing them up together. Not much you can do about the academic piece though.
Anonymous wrote:Mine are 3.5 years apart but because of DD's November birthday, 4 grades apart.
I LOVE the age difference in years (although it wasn't our original plan), but it makes me sad to think they'll only overlap in the same school for 2 year (4th and K, 5th and 1st). I liked having shared experiences with my sister, that we can look back and laugh at today (2 years apart but 1 grade).