Most folk I know prepare their kids to get into GT (pre-K, after school enrichment, summer enrichment). Some for 4 to 6 years, others in crash course fashion the fall of the application process. Which did you do? Or your child did not get in and you are jealous and rationalise this because you neither offered your child a crash course or enriched her intellectually overtime at home?
Anonymous wrote:One of my dearest friends is a red-shirting tiger mom. What a combination! Love her dearly even though we have very different parenting styles. I understand that her child-rearing is in keeping with cultural norms. She loves her boys dearly and is doing what she believes will help them be successful in life. Isn't that what all good parents do? The fact that I disagree with her approach doesn't mean that she is a horrible mom, anymore than my more laid back approach makes me a horrible mom. We respect one another's differences and have actually learned a thing or two from the other person's approach and have gained an understanding of the cultural and societal differences driving our decisions.
Anonymous wrote:My summer boy was accepted into a "top 3" for pre-k, he will be 4 when he starts and he is on the small side. I hope he will be okay--that 60 minutes episode made me nervous!
Anonymous wrote:PP continuation
I hope it turns out to be 5 year olds and 25% of the class but that is not what I have seen, heard or experienced at other schools. GDS could be the exception.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lot of schools around the DC area highly encourage, if not require, you to redshirt summer birthday boys - so often it's not the mom's decision or personality, it's the school.
GDS has several summer birthday boys who are in PK and K "on time." I assume, given GDS' competitiveness for admissions, that the school could have filled their classes with only red-shirted or non-summer boys, but that is not the case. I can't speak for other schools, but I applaud GDS' very sane approach.
I lot of schools around the DC area highly encourage, if not require, you to redshirt summer birthday boys - so often it's not the mom's decision or personality, it's the school.
Anonymous wrote:I lot of schools around the DC area highly encourage, if not require, you to redshirt summer birthday boys - so often it's not the mom's decision or personality, it's the school.
Anonymous wrote:
Redshirt mom vs. Tiger mom -- seeking a competitive advantage?
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7400898n&tag=contentBody;storyMediaBox
They both make me want to puke.
My dear friend immigrated as a child. She is a fierce tiger mom who also chose to redshirt to give her child the competitive edge academically and in sports since he would be the oldest male in the class. Redshirting in her view gave him an additional competitive edge due to maturity.
Tiger moms usually prefer acceleration rather than red-shirting their kids (for example: teach 3 year olds to do 3rd grade math or skip a couple of grade in elementary school.