Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, as someone whose 4 year old is in a preK class full of kids who are *already* turning 6, I say send your kids to school on time.
You're going to have a rough time in life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, as someone whose 4 year old is in a preK class full of kids who are *already* turning 6, I say send your kids to school on time.
they're turning 6 in October of PK4?
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, as someone whose 4 year old is in a preK class full of kids who are *already* turning 6, I say send your kids to school on time.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, as someone whose 4 year old is in a preK class full of kids who are *already* turning 6, I say send your kids to school on time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Send your kid to school on time.
Do you have anything useful to contribute ...?
OP we sent our late summer boy on time to public K and are definitely regretting it a little. There are plusses and minuses. The plus is that he really is learning a lot. His fine motor skills were weak, and he's getting a ton more practice than he would in a preK program. The minus is that it is stressful for the little guy, and he is not having fun at all, in part because he feels slower. Everything they say about K being the new 1st has been absolutely true at our school, for better or for worse. Socially, the issue is that due to the format of the day, there's just less free time and teaching energy spent on social-emotional development. As far as I can tell, the school really has no interest in that -- the only attention they give is putting out fires. So a child who is isolated or having trouble making friends gets no support as long as they are doing OK academically and not causing disruptions. If your child does fine socially already this may not be a concern to you.
Anonymous wrote:We had to hold back due to delays and a fall birthday and I regretted it.. Child was smart and it was clear it was a huge mistake. He did better being with older kids. I would send your kid on time. He was lucky to skip a grade to fix it but often you cannot fix what is done. Your best bet is to do a private K. and if you feel they need K over again, have them repeat at another school or public.
We gave our child the choice of skipping a grade and he choose it. When we went to public, they pushed holding him back due to age and he refused.
Anonymous wrote:Send your kid to school on time.