Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you want your child to be a leader or follower? Being the youngest or oldest in class does have a heavy influence on their character and the traits they develop.
That’s a huge generalization. My DD is one of the youngest, and I’ve heard from every teacher that she’s a leader in class. That’s just her personality.
No one is talking about your daughter specifically. It is a generalization. Not a huge one, one that is true more
often than not. The youngest kids in class are generally looking for cues from others: be is social, academic, behavioral..opposite for the oldest.
Anonymous wrote:I had no interest in red shirting my April birthday son and I’ve always wondered if that’s why he was rejected from a not-all-that-hard-to-get-into private school (but it worked out— he got into a magnet program at our public school and thrived there).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you want your child to be a leader or follower? Being the youngest or oldest in class does have a heavy influence on their character and the traits they develop.
That’s a huge generalization. My DD is one of the youngest, and I’ve heard from every teacher that she’s a leader in class. That’s just her personality.
No one is talking about your daughter specifically. It is a generalization. Not a huge one, one that is true more
often than not. The youngest kids in class are generally looking for cues from others: be is social, academic, behavioral..opposite for the oldest.
Anonymous wrote:DS is a July birthday and currently 4. He is very clever but also immature compared to his peers, mischievous and “active”. He is significantly behind where his older sibling was at his age regarding letters and numbers. He has more behavioral issues at preschool compared to his siblings; he still will sometimes hit his friend if he wants a toy for example. I should mention that he is very tall in the 98% for his age group despite born 4 weeks premature.
Given these factors I want to redshirt, spouse does not. Spouse thinks that since overall DS is fine, he good to begin kindergarten next year. part of spouse’s motivation is financial, even though we can afford it, obviously day care is expensive. I had the experience of starting Kindergarten at age 4 and struggled socially and emotionally as a teenager.
I am not sure how to proceed given that my feelings about DS readiness are unlikely to change. Seeking suggestions from those who have been in a similar situation.
Anonymous wrote:I’m about to enter the DC private school scene with my early April birthday DS4. Redshirting didn’t occur to me until recently when I was asked about it.
-he was a late talker and still has some OT issues
-no behavioral issues
-very tall
-loves sports but is only okay so far
Is this a scenario where locals would redshirt ? Would schools even allow it?
Anonymous wrote:I’m about to enter the DC private school scene with my early April birthday DS4. Redshirting didn’t occur to me until recently when I was asked about it.
-he was a late talker and still has some OT issues
-no behavioral issues
-very tall
-loves sports but is only okay so far
Is this a scenario where locals would redshirt ? Would schools even allow it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If spouse won’t respond to the “let’s give him the gift of time” argument…try using the driving argument (of he enters K at 4 yrs, when he is a sophomore, all his buddies will be getting their driver’s licenses and he’ll be a year behind)…and he’ll be entering college as a 17-year-old. Why??
And finally, if you do have him go ahead in kindergarten and it turns out that he has a hard time with it and you change your minds in a couple of years, you’ll have to face the dilemma of holding him back a grade in school, and this never goes well.
In short, there are so many reasons not to push him into kindergarten before he’s emotionally ready.
He is a July birthday. He would start college at 18.
He’ll still be graduating from HS as a 17-year-old though?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If spouse won’t respond to the “let’s give him the gift of time” argument…try using the driving argument (of he enters K at 4 yrs, when he is a sophomore, all his buddies will be getting their driver’s licenses and he’ll be a year behind)…and he’ll be entering college as a 17-year-old. Why??
And finally, if you do have him go ahead in kindergarten and it turns out that he has a hard time with it and you change your minds in a couple of years, you’ll have to face the dilemma of holding him back a grade in school, and this never goes well.
In short, there are so many reasons not to push him into kindergarten before he’s emotionally ready.
He is a July birthday. He would start college at 18.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you want your child to be a leader or follower? Being the youngest or oldest in class does have a heavy influence on their character and the traits they develop.
That’s a huge generalization. My DD is one of the youngest, and I’ve heard from every teacher that she’s a leader in class. That’s just her personality.
No one is talking about your daughter specifically. It is a generalization. Not a huge one, one that is true more
often than not. The youngest kids in class are generally looking for cues from others: be is social, academic, behavioral..opposite for the oldest. [/quote
I’m not an idiot, of course you aren’t talking specifically about a child you don’t even know. I’m just saying it’s a huge generalization. Several of my DD’s friends in her non-school activity are young for her grade like her and they are very similar. Our neighbor friend that is over a year older and in DD’s grade is a shy follower… I think it’s more inherent personality than anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you want your child to be a leader or follower? Being the youngest or oldest in class does have a heavy influence on their character and the traits they develop.
That’s a huge generalization. My DD is one of the youngest, and I’ve heard from every teacher that she’s a leader in class. That’s just her personality.
Anonymous wrote:Do you want your child to be a leader or follower? Being the youngest or oldest in class does have a heavy influence on their character and the traits they develop.
Anonymous wrote:I’m about to enter the DC private school scene with my early April birthday DS4. Redshirting didn’t occur to me until recently when I was asked about it.
-he was a late talker and still has some OT issues
-no behavioral issues
-very tall
-loves sports but is only okay so far
Is this a scenario where locals would redshirt ? Would schools even allow it?
Anonymous wrote:I would have him professionally evaluated.
We had friends who were divorcing and redshirting their twins was a major issue. The judge ordered an evaluation. The kids were tested by a specialist who found the DD was likely to succeed in K but the DS was not.