Anonymous wrote:I'm 14:49 with the child who was held back then skipped ahead.
I think we should talk about resiliency. Resiliency is what makes you successful in life, not great academics or some splinter skill. It comes from the coaching your mind receives, either externally from parents/therapists, or internally through self-talk when there is trauma. It is the ability to rebound from a period of high stress and failure, with optimism and hope and hopefully, lessons learned for next time.
Mary Alvord does a lot of work with resiliency, and even though we did not have the greatest experience with the practice she founded, I think the concept is a wonderfully applicable one to children with special needs.
When I look at my two children, one who had special needs from birth, the other with no issues in her life at all, I can see that my child with SN is by far the most resilient. He has clawed his way to learning to eat, walk and talk, and now he is working hard on socializing and being attuned to his environment and staying organized. He has had so many setbacks and failures, in the form of bad grades, people thinking he was stupid, being rejected, teased and bullied by his peers. His stoicism and tenacity are heartwarming. He is not afraid of failure and learning through his mistakes.
My second child on the other hand has always excelled at everything and everything has come easy. The day she fails at something will be incredibly traumatic, and she will not be prepared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS was born middle of the year so it never really crossed our minds to hold him back. He has severe ADHD and a big part has been social and emotional delays. He's bright but completely uneven academically due to his LD but holding back would weaken supports in his areas of strength and wouldn't address his LD.
But back to K ... it was disastrous. People say "yeah but they all survive K" or "it's just K" and I want to throat punch them. I went to register DS2 for K the other day and felt sick to my stomach just walking into the building. We pulled DS out in April of K on the advice of his doctors due to concern for depression and suicide. He's been two years in a really supportive private school now and he's mostly recovered though he has stress habits that will probably stick with him for life. The thing is, I'm not sure delaying a year to do public K would really have made anything better. Two years have made a world of difference in his maturity level and ability to regulate himself, but I think we would have been in the same or similar situation if we'd just started the same road last year instead of 2 years ago. The problem was the whole environment, his inability to deal with it, our not having supports in place for him, and getting no help from the school beyond in classroom accommodations from the teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Oh wow... I am one of the PPs with the ASD child. Our full story is that we actually pulled DS from K in November of this year. We didn't want to keep him back... but we put him back in pre-k. No regrets. Our K experience was almost as bad as yours. When we left in November, DS had cried nearly every day of being at school. He was withdrawn, cried on weekends about going on Monday, etc...
So, when people say not to hold back for social reasons, they must not have a child who has serious anxiety, inability to communicate with peers, sensory sensitivities or any of the other non-academic yet serious issues that impact a child in a school setting.
Since switching schools, we have had smooth sailing. DS still has ASD... don't get me wrong. He's no social butterfly... but he has space to practice social skills in a safe, calm setting without 20 other kids moving and talking around him.
I just want to sympathize and say I know from experience as well how bad K can be for a kid who is not ready to meet the expectations.
Anonymous wrote:My DS was born middle of the year so it never really crossed our minds to hold him back. He has severe ADHD and a big part has been social and emotional delays. He's bright but completely uneven academically due to his LD but holding back would weaken supports in his areas of strength and wouldn't address his LD.
But back to K ... it was disastrous. People say "yeah but they all survive K" or "it's just K" and I want to throat punch them. I went to register DS2 for K the other day and felt sick to my stomach just walking into the building. We pulled DS out in April of K on the advice of his doctors due to concern for depression and suicide. He's been two years in a really supportive private school now and he's mostly recovered though he has stress habits that will probably stick with him for life. The thing is, I'm not sure delaying a year to do public K would really have made anything better. Two years have made a world of difference in his maturity level and ability to regulate himself, but I think we would have been in the same or similar situation if we'd just started the same road last year instead of 2 years ago. The problem was the whole environment, his inability to deal with it, our not having supports in place for him, and getting no help from the school beyond in classroom accommodations from the teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone ever hold a girl back? You always hear about boys being red-shirted or held back but rarely ever do you hear about girls.