Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are overcrowded, yes they will be more strict. It sucks but I recommend that you fight for it. The curriculum is so ridiculously slow and my child (an Aug birthday) is bored out of her mind.
I truly do not understand this. What is too slow? If the child is a precocious reader, is she not allowed to read at her level? In math, there are things like "make an addition fact family". That can be using 5+2=7 or 326+408=734. Right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call the school and ask. Ours was not very friendly so we didn't bother and we ended up going to a small private. If you do private for K and 1st, you can supposedly transfer to 2nd in public without an issue.
Not the OP, but thank you for that info! We had been wondering that. Our DS also has a Sept birthday and we're hoping to try for EEK, but good to know this might be an option. We'd be paying for an extra year of preschool anyway, so if we could get into a private K that'd be worth the expense.
Anonymous wrote:If they are overcrowded, yes they will be more strict. It sucks but I recommend that you fight for it. The curriculum is so ridiculously slow and my child (an Aug birthday) is bored out of her mind.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks, I'm familiar with all of the arguments for/against EEK, and am only considering it because our preschool director feels that our daughter is a great candidate. I'm specifically looking for information/thoughts about whether the test has changed, or whether the county or specific schools are imposing higher requirements recently.
Anonymous wrote:Call the school and ask. Ours was not very friendly so we didn't bother and we ended up going to a small private. If you do private for K and 1st, you can supposedly transfer to 2nd in public without an issue.