Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking as a mom whose kids are grown--don't rush it. It goes fast enough. Send the child to kindergarten.
Absolutely agree (seasoned mom of 3 here, including one of those "advanced" reading chapter books doing double digit addition/subtraction kindergartners)
Kindergarten is not only the best year for the kid, but it is pretty darn fun for the parent as well. Take your time, enjoy the moment. If you have a girl especially, the mean girl stuff starts in first grade, and goes full force soon after. Why take from your child that one year where everything is important and exciting, when whoever you sit next to is your best friend, and where coloring and gluing things is as important as the other stuff?
Do you realize how educated this area is? Even if your kid "went to montessori" it is not like she is going to be some freakishly smart anamoly in her class. She WILL have an intellectual peer group. There are going to be many kids in her class, including younger kids and kids who stayed at home with a parent and skipped preschool, who will be at or around her level. Having other classmates who start kindergarten reading, doing math and writing is just a fact of life here, and not a novelty.
Anonymous wrote:Speaking as a mom whose kids are grown--don't rush it. It goes fast enough. Send the child to kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:OR, she's been in Montessori school since age 2 and already knows how to interact socially and pay attention to an authority figure.plus knows letters, numbers, phonics, concepts, etc.
That's going to help a lot in high school when all her friends are driving and you have a 13 year old wanting to go with them.
OR, she's been in Montessori school since age 2 and already knows how to interact socially and pay attention to an authority figure.plus knows letters, numbers, phonics, concepts, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Ask any teacher of most any grade. They're going to tell you that skipping kindergarten would be a huge disservice to the child for years afterward. Teachers, please post on this!
If your concern is, "My very bright child is going to be bored stiff, is reading already prior to K, is doing math already...." please consider that K is as much about adjusting to the school environment and preparing for the structure and faster pace that hits when K is done. You can work with the school to find things to keep a bright child engaged, and believe me, even a bright kid whom you fear will be bored in K is going to be engaged and excited by the social side of it -- and that side matters.
I can't believe any public school would allow a child to skip K anyway. A private school of course could allow it, but I would seriously question the decision and whether the school was doing it mostly to keep the parents happy -- not because it's the best thing for the child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oops! just checked. School is mandatory at age 5 for MD, VA, and DC.
I don't think that's accurate for VA. At 5, a kid CAN start. At 6, they MUST start.
Anonymous wrote:oops! just checked. School is mandatory at age 5 for MD, VA, and DC.