Anonymous wrote:There are reasons other than athletic for kids to repeat. My child is repeating after skipping an earlier grade. Had we not been in full pandemic mode at the time of the skip (and her school able to manage differentiation better), they wouldn't have skipped. Now, a couple of years later (and 1-1.5 years younger than everyone in the class), the best decision is to just move to a new school (that is more of a challenge) and hold back to be with age peers. The pandemic really messed up a lot for these kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the top privates all do this--they have kids repeat 9th or 10th. STA and Sidwell do it frequently. Many of these kids are not paying full tuition (or any tuition) so the money is not an issue.
Why do they do this, for athletes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the top privates all do this--they have kids repeat 9th or 10th. STA and Sidwell do it frequently. Many of these kids are not paying full tuition (or any tuition) so the money is not an issue.
Why do they do this, for athletes?
So that they have bigger, stronger kids with more skills and experience in their sport. It helps the high schools and gives the kids a boost when starting college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the top privates all do this--they have kids repeat 9th or 10th. STA and Sidwell do it frequently. Many of these kids are not paying full tuition (or any tuition) so the money is not an issue.
Why do they do this, for athletes?
Anonymous wrote:the top privates all do this--they have kids repeat 9th or 10th. STA and Sidwell do it frequently. Many of these kids are not paying full tuition (or any tuition) so the money is not an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you hold your kids back a year for $50K a year to get them into sports? Why?
This is why many of them do it in high school. They go public until 9th or 10th grade, then they reclass and redo that year at a private. Then they get more looks from certain colleges (who have those privates on their list) and they save money by not sending them private from k-9/10
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We seem to have a ton of reclassed kids at our school and no one did it AT our school. It feels like there would be social issues?
Did they do it high school though? That’s what is striking me as strange. Usually that’s all been done between K and 3rd or so.
Questioning PP, do you have high school aged athletes? If not, you may be surprised to know that many of them reclass in high school to ensure another year of growth and maturity while striving for D1, or any level really, college sports.
Some of these kids were already redshirted while younger. So private schools end up with 20 year old graduates
I haven’t heard of the redshirting happening while in high school, at least in the DC private schools, no. In K/early elem, sure, or in public schools, but it’s new to me that athletes are redshirting while in private high schools. But I don’t have an athletic kid and only a 9th grader, so I guess I’ve learned something!
Anonymous wrote:There are reasons other than athletic for kids to repeat. My child is repeating after skipping an earlier grade. Had we not been in full pandemic mode at the time of the skip (and her school able to manage differentiation better), they wouldn't have skipped. Now, a couple of years later (and 1-1.5 years younger than everyone in the class), the best decision is to just move to a new school (that is more of a challenge) and hold back to be with age peers. The pandemic really messed up a lot for these kids.
Anonymous wrote:So, you hold your kids back a year for $50K a year to get them into sports? Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We seem to have a ton of reclassed kids at our school and no one did it AT our school. It feels like there would be social issues?
Did they do it high school though? That’s what is striking me as strange. Usually that’s all been done between K and 3rd or so.
Questioning PP, do you have high school aged athletes? If not, you may be surprised to know that many of them reclass in high school to ensure another year of growth and maturity while striving for D1, or any level really, college sports.
Some of these kids were already redshirted while younger. So private schools end up with 20 year old graduates
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you hold your kids back a year for $50K a year to get them into sports? Why?
This is why many of them do it in high school. They go public until 9th or 10th grade, then they reclass and redo that year at a private. Then they get more looks from certain colleges (who have those privates on their list) and they save money by not sending them private from k-9/10
If the kids were really good, they'd get in to college either way. Makes zero sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you hold your kids back a year for $50K a year to get them into sports? Why?
This is why many of them do it in high school. They go public until 9th or 10th grade, then they reclass and redo that year at a private. Then they get more looks from certain colleges (who have those privates on their list) and they save money by not sending them private from k-9/10