Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Your child was 12 in 8th grade? That is not the norm at all! Most are 13 and turn 14 that year. My 14.5 year old just finished 8th and my 12 year old is now going into 7th. And we sent them on time. Your math seems off!
Your math is off, my child was 13 the entire 8th grade year.
All the birthdays my child attended in 8th grade were for kids turning 14. Nobody was 12, turning 13.
My child will be 12 turning 13 in 8th.
Mine will be, too. She will not turn 13 until December of 8th grade.
Are you in NY?
These discussions become meaningless when people from other areas don’t bother explaining the differences in their cut off dates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Your child was 12 in 8th grade? That is not the norm at all! Most are 13 and turn 14 that year. My 14.5 year old just finished 8th and my 12 year old is now going into 7th. And we sent them on time. Your math seems off!
Your math is off, my child was 13 the entire 8th grade year.
All the birthdays my child attended in 8th grade were for kids turning 14. Nobody was 12, turning 13.
September birthday here, I turned 13 in 8th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Your child was 12 in 8th grade? That is not the norm at all! Most are 13 and turn 14 that year. My 14.5 year old just finished 8th and my 12 year old is now going into 7th. And we sent them on time. Your math seems off!
Your math is off, my child was 13 the entire 8th grade year.
All the birthdays my child attended in 8th grade were for kids turning 14. Nobody was 12, turning 13.
My child will be 12 turning 13 in 8th.
Mine will be, too. She will not turn 13 until December of 8th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Your child was 12 in 8th grade? That is not the norm at all! Most are 13 and turn 14 that year. My 14.5 year old just finished 8th and my 12 year old is now going into 7th. And we sent them on time. Your math seems off!
Your math is off, my child was 13 the entire 8th grade year.
All the birthdays my child attended in 8th grade were for kids turning 14. Nobody was 12, turning 13.
My child will be 12 turning 13 in 8th.
Anonymous wrote:My 1st grader had two 8 year olds in her class in the spring. She's still only 6. It's weird. And those kids were the worst behaved too.
Anonymous wrote:If I'd redshirted my daughter she would have turned 14 in 8th grade. Would that really be a problem? She wouldn't have turned 15 until 9th grade.
As a non-redshirted kid she'll start 8th as a 12 yo, turning 13 yo soon after.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Your child was 12 in 8th grade? That is not the norm at all! Most are 13 and turn 14 that year. My 14.5 year old just finished 8th and my 12 year old is now going into 7th. And we sent them on time. Your math seems off!
Your math is off, my child was 13 the entire 8th grade year.
All the birthdays my child attended in 8th grade were for kids turning 14. Nobody was 12, turning 13.
My child will be 12 turning 13 in 8th.
What month? If this is true, then your kid started kindergarten when they were 4. So they had to turn 5 fairly early in the year (depending on your state’s cutoff), or they wouldn’t have been allowed to go. So you’re being disingenuous at best. Your kid was 13 most of the year in 8th grade.
Yes, they technically were four for a few weeks but they were five the majority of the year. My child will e 12 turning 13 for 8th.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Your child was 12 in 8th grade? That is not the norm at all! Most are 13 and turn 14 that year. My 14.5 year old just finished 8th and my 12 year old is now going into 7th. And we sent them on time. Your math seems off!
Your math is off, my child was 13 the entire 8th grade year.
All the birthdays my child attended in 8th grade were for kids turning 14. Nobody was 12, turning 13.
My child started kinder at 5 and was 5 the entire time, that made DC 13 the entire 8th grade year. I suppose your child was below average as was classmates.
Anonymous wrote:My 8th grader was 13 all year and won’t turn 14 until late September. Luckily he is tall and very athletic or he’d probably struggle socially. I hate that people do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This year was interesting - there were two kids that turned 7 in my daughter's kindergarten class before winter break. Both of them were redshirted in 2020 and then did private JK in 2021 because mommy wanted them to be in school in person, then instead of starting them in 1st like they should have, put them in public school K. Not very smart ladies.
I did exactly this with mine but years ago - private K and then public K, late July birthday. He's first year at MIT now. Best decision ever and I'd highly recommended for anyone who can afford an extra year of private school.
Sounds completely unnecessary if he has a good preschool and was properly prepared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
It’s not a big deal at all. Anti-redshirters are just bad at math.
12-14 = age range with no redshirting (12 months max age difference, most not that much)
12-14 = age range with summer redshirting (15 months max age difference, most not that much)
12-15 = age range with spring redshirting (18 months max, most not that much — very uncommon)
Just to recap the numbers for the people who suck at math
It’s not a big deal.
12-14 is a two year difference.
12-15 is a three year difference.
That is huge.
Wrong. At no point in time is there a three year difference.
It’s an 18 month MAX difference in age between the oldest spring redshirted kid and the very youngest September birthdays. The vast majority of kids are much closer in age than that.
Plus, spring redshirting is not common.
Aprilon is common. Sometimes march.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal. Most 8th graders will turn 14 at some point during the year, and many will be almost 15 at the end of the school year. So it's not that big a difference. 14.5 is probably the norm.
My child turns 13 during 8th grade so that’s a two year age difference. It’s a big difference.
Your child was 12 in 8th grade? That is not the norm at all! Most are 13 and turn 14 that year. My 14.5 year old just finished 8th and my 12 year old is now going into 7th. And we sent them on time. Your math seems off!
Your math is off, my child was 13 the entire 8th grade year.
All the birthdays my child attended in 8th grade were for kids turning 14. Nobody was 12, turning 13.