Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I've definitely seen this more with boys than girls.
If girls had birthdays past April or May, they were sent at the age of 5. If boys had birthdays in April or May, they were held and put into K the following school year. Just my observations.
I've definitely seen kids start school at 6+ and then they are turning 7 in K, 8 in 1st grade, etc etc. You can also add in maturity to your decision - some kids just aren't ready and some are.
What about August/ September? That seems like the most likely to redshirt since they would otherwise be 4 when starting.
For girls (mine included) who turned 5 in August and September, they went. There was a girl in her class that turned 5 September 30.
For boys, they seemed to be Jan/Feb/Mar/April (at the latest) birthdays. Not many boy birthdays in her classes that turned 6 that K year. Definitely 7 though.
Are you a teacher? If not, why do you have all this birthday data?
Dp. Birthday parties?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I've definitely seen this more with boys than girls.
If girls had birthdays past April or May, they were sent at the age of 5. If boys had birthdays in April or May, they were held and put into K the following school year. Just my observations.
I've definitely seen kids start school at 6+ and then they are turning 7 in K, 8 in 1st grade, etc etc. You can also add in maturity to your decision - some kids just aren't ready and some are.
What about August/ September? That seems like the most likely to redshirt since they would otherwise be 4 when starting.
For girls (mine included) who turned 5 in August and September, they went. There was a girl in her class that turned 5 September 30.
For boys, they seemed to be Jan/Feb/Mar/April (at the latest) birthdays. Not many boy birthdays in her classes that turned 6 that K year. Definitely 7 though.
Are you a teacher? If not, why do you have all this birthday data?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I've definitely seen this more with boys than girls.
If girls had birthdays past April or May, they were sent at the age of 5. If boys had birthdays in April or May, they were held and put into K the following school year. Just my observations.
I've definitely seen kids start school at 6+ and then they are turning 7 in K, 8 in 1st grade, etc etc. You can also add in maturity to your decision - some kids just aren't ready and some are.
What about August/ September? That seems like the most likely to redshirt since they would otherwise be 4 when starting.
For girls (mine included) who turned 5 in August and September, they went. There was a girl in her class that turned 5 September 30.
For boys, they seemed to be Jan/Feb/Mar/April (at the latest) birthdays. Not many boy birthdays in her classes that turned 6 that K year. Definitely 7 though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I've definitely seen this more with boys than girls.
If girls had birthdays past April or May, they were sent at the age of 5. If boys had birthdays in April or May, they were held and put into K the following school year. Just my observations.
I've definitely seen kids start school at 6+ and then they are turning 7 in K, 8 in 1st grade, etc etc. You can also add in maturity to your decision - some kids just aren't ready and some are.
What about August/ September? That seems like the most likely to redshirt since they would otherwise be 4 when starting.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I've definitely seen this more with boys than girls.
If girls had birthdays past April or May, they were sent at the age of 5. If boys had birthdays in April or May, they were held and put into K the following school year. Just my observations.
I've definitely seen kids start school at 6+ and then they are turning 7 in K, 8 in 1st grade, etc etc. You can also add in maturity to your decision - some kids just aren't ready and some are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t have to do anything. Kindergarten is not mandatory in VA so you are not breaking a law by not sending your kid to school this year. If you decide to do this, next year, just go enroll in K a year late.
I thought that, too. However, I just googled the Virginia law and you are supposed to notify the school of your decision to delay entry.
Anonymous wrote:Gift of time. Don’t send a 4 almost 5 year old to kinder. Nothing wrong with be one of the older fall babies in the class (October, November, December).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t do anything. The school doesn’t know your child is there. Just register next year.
You're technically breaking the law by not notifying, but it's a law that nobody really cares about or enforces AFAIK, kinda like jaywalking on an empty street.
Anonymous wrote:This whole redshirting thing is nuts. It used to be that the cut off date was December 31st so every kid born in the same calendar year was in the same grade. Yes, there were obviously kids who were nearly a year older than others but if was far less common to have kids who were 15-18 months older in the same class. That age gap creates a lot of issues for both teachers and kids, especially in elementary school.
There are rumors that the county is looking into ending the practice but who knows if that's really true.
Anonymous wrote:Gift of time. Don’t send a 4 almost 5 year old to kinder. Nothing wrong with be one of the older fall babies in the class (October, November, December).
Anonymous wrote:This whole redshirting thing is nuts. It used to be that the cut off date was December 31st so every kid born in the same calendar year was in the same grade. Yes, there were obviously kids who were nearly a year older than others but if was far less common to have kids who were 15-18 months older in the same class. That age gap creates a lot of issues for both teachers and kids, especially in elementary school.
There are rumors that the county is looking into ending the practice but who knows if that's really true.