Anonymous wrote:If a school cares more about getting your money then getting your kid in an appropriate setting you should pull both kids out and find another school. Ridiculous. Also how will you explain to larlo why he’s older than all his classmates- ‘sorry that was the only place they could fit you and your sister really loved her school so…”. That will not go over well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. So many bad takes here. OP, this is a private school. They can do what they want. If you want to attend the school, you can either accept this or go to another school. You can argue with the school if you want, maybe it will work, maybe it won’t. The school is certainly under no obligation to admit your child in the grade you want, versus what the admissions team wants. They’ll just go to the next person on the list if you seem difficult.
OP already has another child at currently enrolled there, they aren’t new to the private school world or this school specifically.
I know. That still does not mean the school is under any obligation to admit the sibling in the grade that OP prefers. If the school has a wait list — and many do — the school is not going to spend a lot of time worrying about the decision. OP is of course free to ask for reconsideration politely, but the school has no obligation to admit according to what OP wants. All the hyperventilating in this thread is useless.
Thank you. OP here. What I was hoping to get from this thread was the opinion of parents of older children. There aren’t many March redshirted kids at our school and I worry that my son will feel “less then” or perhaps other kids will make fun of him. He is also tall for his age and quite athletic (for an almost 5 year old).
I appreciate some some of the apps that mentioned that in middle school this becomes a non issue, but I am afraid of my son being embarrassed of turning 7 in K with some of his friends still being 5 and much smaller than him.
We are not very tall people (though my husband’s family has very tall people) so it’s likely his growth will slow down (it happened with my older kids).
If there aren’t many March redshirted kids at your school, but they want to redshirt your child, you need to find out why. This does not sound right. And I say this as someone who thinks DCUM anti-redshirters are collectively one of the dimmest group of posters on DCUM, so I am hardy an anti-redshirter. It would be one thing if the school regularly redshirted March kids, but to have it rarely recommended for one child, especially when that child is a sibling, is unusual. Something seems off here, and you need to understand why.
+1 and listen very carefully. Also talk to a specialist about the immaturity and speech delays. They may be what you should be concerned about, not the admissions offer
OP here. He does not stand out to me in any ways compared to his classmates (boys especially). Some kids speak really well and have great vocabulary at 4-5. Others, it’s difficult to understand what they are even saying. Same goes for immaturity. His teachers tell me that kids are all over the spectrum at this age in both maturity and academic abilities.
My son is in speech already and I am not sure what else I can do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. So many bad takes here. OP, this is a private school. They can do what they want. If you want to attend the school, you can either accept this or go to another school. You can argue with the school if you want, maybe it will work, maybe it won’t. The school is certainly under no obligation to admit your child in the grade you want, versus what the admissions team wants. They’ll just go to the next person on the list if you seem difficult.
OP already has another child at currently enrolled there, they aren’t new to the private school world or this school specifically.
I know. That still does not mean the school is under any obligation to admit the sibling in the grade that OP prefers. If the school has a wait list — and many do — the school is not going to spend a lot of time worrying about the decision. OP is of course free to ask for reconsideration politely, but the school has no obligation to admit according to what OP wants. All the hyperventilating in this thread is useless.
Thank you. OP here. What I was hoping to get from this thread was the opinion of parents of older children. There aren’t many March redshirted kids at our school and I worry that my son will feel “less then” or perhaps other kids will make fun of him. He is also tall for his age and quite athletic (for an almost 5 year old).
I appreciate some some of the apps that mentioned that in middle school this becomes a non issue, but I am afraid of my son being embarrassed of turning 7 in K with some of his friends still being 5 and much smaller than him.
We are not very tall people (though my husband’s family has very tall people) so it’s likely his growth will slow down (it happened with my older kids).
If there aren’t many March redshirted kids at your school, but they want to redshirt your child, you need to find out why. This does not sound right. And I say this as someone who thinks DCUM anti-redshirters are collectively one of the dimmest group of posters on DCUM, so I am hardy an anti-redshirter. It would be one thing if the school regularly redshirted March kids, but to have it rarely recommended for one child, especially when that child is a sibling, is unusual. Something seems off here, and you need to understand why.
+1 and listen very carefully. Also talk to a specialist about the immaturity and speech delays. They may be what you should be concerned about, not the admissions offer
OP here. He does not stand out to me in any ways compared to his classmates (boys especially). Some kids speak really well and have great vocabulary at 4-5. Others, it’s difficult to understand what they are even saying. Same goes for immaturity. His teachers tell me that kids are all over the spectrum at this age in both maturity and academic abilities.
My son is in speech already and I am not sure what else I can do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. So many bad takes here. OP, this is a private school. They can do what they want. If you want to attend the school, you can either accept this or go to another school. You can argue with the school if you want, maybe it will work, maybe it won’t. The school is certainly under no obligation to admit your child in the grade you want, versus what the admissions team wants. They’ll just go to the next person on the list if you seem difficult.
OP already has another child at currently enrolled there, they aren’t new to the private school world or this school specifically.
I know. That still does not mean the school is under any obligation to admit the sibling in the grade that OP prefers. If the school has a wait list — and many do — the school is not going to spend a lot of time worrying about the decision. OP is of course free to ask for reconsideration politely, but the school has no obligation to admit according to what OP wants. All the hyperventilating in this thread is useless.
Thank you. OP here. What I was hoping to get from this thread was the opinion of parents of older children. There aren’t many March redshirted kids at our school and I worry that my son will feel “less then” or perhaps other kids will make fun of him. He is also tall for his age and quite athletic (for an almost 5 year old).
I appreciate some some of the apps that mentioned that in middle school this becomes a non issue, but I am afraid of my son being embarrassed of turning 7 in K with some of his friends still being 5 and much smaller than him.
We are not very tall people (though my husband’s family has very tall people) so it’s likely his growth will slow down (it happened with my older kids).
If there aren’t many March redshirted kids at your school, but they want to redshirt your child, you need to find out why. This does not sound right. And I say this as someone who thinks DCUM anti-redshirters are collectively one of the dimmest group of posters on DCUM, so I am hardy an anti-redshirter. It would be one thing if the school regularly redshirted March kids, but to have it rarely recommended for one child, especially when that child is a sibling, is unusual. Something seems off here, and you need to understand why.
+1 and listen very carefully. Also talk to a specialist about the immaturity and speech delays. They may be what you should be concerned about, not the admissions offer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redshirting is a huge advantage for boys both socially and with sports in middle and high school. Other parents will be mad because your son is bigger and more developed than theirs, but I would gladly do this for a March birthday boy.
You’re stupid. Plain and simple.
Wow, thanks. Sophisticated argument there. There is tons of data about how the oldest boys allowed on a team are likely to develop sooner and outperform, getting more playing time and reinforcing the advantage. If your son isn't athletic I don't see much of an advantage to red shirting, beyond the social skills and maturity. It is widely understood to be an advantage for athletes though.
They aren't developing sooner. They are developing before the kids in the same grade as they are a year or two older.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. So many bad takes here. OP, this is a private school. They can do what they want. If you want to attend the school, you can either accept this or go to another school. You can argue with the school if you want, maybe it will work, maybe it won’t. The school is certainly under no obligation to admit your child in the grade you want, versus what the admissions team wants. They’ll just go to the next person on the list if you seem difficult.
OP already has another child at currently enrolled there, they aren’t new to the private school world or this school specifically.
I know. That still does not mean the school is under any obligation to admit the sibling in the grade that OP prefers. If the school has a wait list — and many do — the school is not going to spend a lot of time worrying about the decision. OP is of course free to ask for reconsideration politely, but the school has no obligation to admit according to what OP wants. All the hyperventilating in this thread is useless.
Thank you. OP here. What I was hoping to get from this thread was the opinion of parents of older children. There aren’t many March redshirted kids at our school and I worry that my son will feel “less then” or perhaps other kids will make fun of him. He is also tall for his age and quite athletic (for an almost 5 year old).
I appreciate some some of the apps that mentioned that in middle school this becomes a non issue, but I am afraid of my son being embarrassed of turning 7 in K with some of his friends still being 5 and much smaller than him.
We are not very tall people (though my husband’s family has very tall people) so it’s likely his growth will slow down (it happened with my older kids).
If there aren’t many March redshirted kids at your school, but they want to redshirt your child, you need to find out why. This does not sound right. And I say this as someone who thinks DCUM anti-redshirters are collectively one of the dimmest group of posters on DCUM, so I am hardy an anti-redshirter. It would be one thing if the school regularly redshirted March kids, but to have it rarely recommended for one child, especially when that child is a sibling, is unusual. Something seems off here, and you need to understand why.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. So many bad takes here. OP, this is a private school. They can do what they want. If you want to attend the school, you can either accept this or go to another school. You can argue with the school if you want, maybe it will work, maybe it won’t. The school is certainly under no obligation to admit your child in the grade you want, versus what the admissions team wants. They’ll just go to the next person on the list if you seem difficult.
OP already has another child at currently enrolled there, they aren’t new to the private school world or this school specifically.
I know. That still does not mean the school is under any obligation to admit the sibling in the grade that OP prefers. If the school has a wait list — and many do — the school is not going to spend a lot of time worrying about the decision. OP is of course free to ask for reconsideration politely, but the school has no obligation to admit according to what OP wants. All the hyperventilating in this thread is useless.
Thank you. OP here. What I was hoping to get from this thread was the opinion of parents of older children. There aren’t many March redshirted kids at our school and I worry that my son will feel “less then” or perhaps other kids will make fun of him. He is also tall for his age and quite athletic (for an almost 5 year old).
I appreciate some some of the apps that mentioned that in middle school this becomes a non issue, but I am afraid of my son being embarrassed of turning 7 in K with some of his friends still being 5 and much smaller than him.
We are not very tall people (though my husband’s family has very tall people) so it’s likely his growth will slow down (it happened with my older kids).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, private school parent here who redshirted a summer birthday. One of his friends is a redshirted spring birthday. No one cares. One thing about starting in PK or K is that the kids all know each other. Social groups are well established before that stuff is on their radar. It’s a non-issue.
And I can’t help but laugh at everyone who says that they’re trying to bill you for extra money. They are not. We were recommended for an extra year when we were on a ton of financial aid. They definitely lost money on us. Believe me, as another poster said, they filled their classes just fine. They don’t have to try and squeeze an extra year’s tuition out of anyone.
Your child must be young. The kids definitely talk about it by 3rd/4th grade and I’m sure your child will be asked why he was “held back” and it will be implied he’s stupid. This always happens. How naive to think that because kids went to the same preschool and their moms volunteered together on the PTA that they will not be aware of Larlo being 1.5 or 1 year older than the vast majority of the class. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redshirting is a huge advantage for boys both socially and with sports in middle and high school. Other parents will be mad because your son is bigger and more developed than theirs, but I would gladly do this for a March birthday boy.
You’re stupid. Plain and simple.
Wow, thanks. Sophisticated argument there. There is tons of data about how the oldest boys allowed on a team are likely to develop sooner and outperform, getting more playing time and reinforcing the advantage. If your son isn't athletic I don't see much of an advantage to red shirting, beyond the social skills and maturity. It is widely understood to be an advantage for athletes though.
Not sophisticated because it isn’t. Just call it what it is. Stupid, plain and simple.
Why is it stupid? Why wouldn't you want your son to be one of the oldest in his class? What disadvantage is there?
Being a high school student at 19
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redshirting is a huge advantage for boys both socially and with sports in middle and high school. Other parents will be mad because your son is bigger and more developed than theirs, but I would gladly do this for a March birthday boy.
You’re stupid. Plain and simple.
Wow, thanks. Sophisticated argument there. There is tons of data about how the oldest boys allowed on a team are likely to develop sooner and outperform, getting more playing time and reinforcing the advantage. If your son isn't athletic I don't see much of an advantage to red shirting, beyond the social skills and maturity. It is widely understood to be an advantage for athletes though.
They aren't developing sooner. They are developing before the kids in the same grade as they are a year or two older.
No one is 2 years older than kids in the same grade. If March bday kid is redshirted (which would be the earliest bday I’ve ever heard of redshirting), they’d be AT MOST 1.5 years older than a few other kids in their grade (if you live somewhere w a September cut off…some privates have august or even July cut offs in which case the March bday kid could possibly be 16-17 months older than the youngest kids in the grade). There are not kids who are actually 24 months older than other kids in the same grade.
Maybe not 2 years, but more than 18 months definitely possible. Unusual and I was surprised.
Yeah I don’t believe that you know any kids more than 18 months apart in the same grade. That is not believable and you are exaggerating (unless you’re talking about a kid w special needs)
NP but the entire premise of this thread is a school wanting to redshirt a March birthday. Well if he is redshirted, he would be 18 months older than any August birthdays in the class. So obviously it can happen. And according to OP, her son doesn't have special needs.
It's just weird to accuse someone of making up a scenario that is literally the scenario OP is proposing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redshirting is a huge advantage for boys both socially and with sports in middle and high school. Other parents will be mad because your son is bigger and more developed than theirs, but I would gladly do this for a March birthday boy.
You’re stupid. Plain and simple.
Wow, thanks. Sophisticated argument there. There is tons of data about how the oldest boys allowed on a team are likely to develop sooner and outperform, getting more playing time and reinforcing the advantage. If your son isn't athletic I don't see much of an advantage to red shirting, beyond the social skills and maturity. It is widely understood to be an advantage for athletes though.
They aren't developing sooner. They are developing before the kids in the same grade as they are a year or two older.
No one is 2 years older than kids in the same grade. If March bday kid is redshirted (which would be the earliest bday I’ve ever heard of redshirting), they’d be AT MOST 1.5 years older than a few other kids in their grade (if you live somewhere w a September cut off…some privates have august or even July cut offs in which case the March bday kid could possibly be 16-17 months older than the youngest kids in the grade). There are not kids who are actually 24 months older than other kids in the same grade.
Maybe not 2 years, but more than 18 months definitely possible. Unusual and I was surprised.
Yeah I don’t believe that you know any kids more than 18 months apart in the same grade. That is not believable and you are exaggerating (unless you’re talking about a kid w special needs)
NP but the entire premise of this thread is a school wanting to redshirt a March birthday. Well if he is redshirted, he would be 18 months older than any August birthdays in the class. So obviously it can happen. And according to OP, her son doesn't have special needs.
It's just weird to accuse someone of making up a scenario that is literally the scenario OP is proposing.