She sounds ready. Starting to sound out words and being ready for Bob books is a great place to be at the beginning of K.Anonymous wrote:OP here. My daughter is 4.5 and we are leaning towards starting her in kindergarten this fall (turns 5 late July). She knows all letters and numbers 1-10, can write her name and all letters and numbers 1-10, knows a few sight words, knows all letter sounds.
She's very social and has no issue being separated from me (she goes to all day preschool). The only thing she struggles with a bit is her reaction when things don't go her way. Crying is a natural response for her but it is SO MUCH better than 3-6 months ago, so expecting even more improvement. She loves to learn and her teacher says she's very engaged.
Based off of the feedback above I think she's ok... I'd just heard about some kids reading before kindergarten and got kind of worried. Though, if we held her till 6, I have no doubt she'd be reading before she entered kindergarten. But then she may be frustrated if they're working on things like sounding out letters?
Struggling with this decision of sending a young 5 to kindergarten a bit if you can't tell...
Anonymous wrote:DS is a late August birthday (turns 5 the day before school starts!) and we are also struggling with this decision. He knows all his letters and numbers beyond 20, but struggles to come close to writing his name, sit still, pay attention, follow directions, etc. Academically I think he would do ok, but socially and maturity-speaking, it could be a disaster![]()
We are really torn b/c I'm against the idea of redshirting in general, yet I don't think my child is ready.
Anonymous wrote:I don't want to derail this conversation, but what happens on the other end of the spectrum. My daughter starts kindergarten in the fall. She has been reading Bob books for months now, and gradually moving onto harder books. She can also do basic addition pretty consistently (subtraction less consistently.) I'm sure she could happily sit quiet and learn letter sounds, but do most schools also pull out some kids that are further along?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. My daughter is 4.5 and we are leaning towards starting her in kindergarten this fall (turns 5 late July). She knows all letters and numbers 1-10, can write her name and all letters and numbers 1-10, knows a few sight words, knows all letter sounds.
She's very social and has no issue being separated from me (she goes to all day preschool). The only thing she struggles with a bit is her reaction when things don't go her way. Crying is a natural response for her but it is SO MUCH better than 3-6 months ago, so expecting even more improvement. She loves to learn and her teacher says she's very engaged.
Based off of the feedback above I think she's ok... I'd just heard about some kids reading before kindergarten and got kind of worried. Though, if we held her till 6, I have no doubt she'd be reading before she entered kindergarten. But then she may be frustrated if they're working on things like sounding out letters?
Struggling with this decision of sending a young 5 to kindergarten a bit if you can't tell...
Anonymous wrote:OP here. My daughter is 4.5 and we are leaning towards starting her in kindergarten this fall (turns 5 late July). She knows all letters and numbers 1-10, can write her name and all letters and numbers 1-10, knows a few sight words, knows all letter sounds.
She's very social and has no issue being separated from me (she goes to all day preschool). The only thing she struggles with a bit is her reaction when things don't go her way. Crying is a natural response for her but it is SO MUCH better than 3-6 months ago, so expecting even more improvement. She loves to learn and her teacher says she's very engaged.
Based off of the feedback above I think she's ok... I'd just heard about some kids reading before kindergarten and got kind of worried. Though, if we held her till 6, I have no doubt she'd be reading before she entered kindergarten. But then she may be frustrated if they're working on things like sounding out letters?
Struggling with this decision of sending a young 5 to kindergarten a bit if you can't tell...
Anonymous wrote:The social emotional stuff is so much more important. It’s easy to teach a calm kid his letters but if a reader is screaming because his favorite center is over, the whole class gets derailed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The social emotional stuff is so much more important. It’s easy to teach a calm kid his letters but if a reader is screaming because his favorite center is over, the whole class gets derailed.
This issue we experienced is that they didn't teach letters or letter sounds in kindergarten. In writing workshop, unit 1, starting on the first day of kindergarten, was for the kids to write a personal narrative. In reading workshop, the kids were expected to sit and read independently to themselves unless it was their turn with the teacher. In both cases, the kids were expected come in knowing their letters and be starting to sound out words. In my experience, a kid who is lost and can't complete the tasks is more likely to act out.
I'm not saying emotional stuff isn't very important, but letters and letter sounds are also helpful for readiness.
+1. Our DCPS starts pullouts for Kers who don't know letters/numbers on day 1. Obviously, that means the kids will be taught & learn them if they don't know them, but there is a definite expectation that they already do and the curriculum starts from there.
Anonymous wrote:I don't want to derail this conversation, but what happens on the other end of the spectrum. My daughter starts kindergarten in the fall. She has been reading Bob books for months now, and gradually moving onto harder books. She can also do basic addition pretty consistently (subtraction less consistently.) I'm sure she could happily sit quiet and learn letter sounds, but do most schools also pull out some kids that are further along?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. My daughter is 4.5 and we are leaning towards starting her in kindergarten this fall (turns 5 late July). She knows all letters and numbers 1-10, can write her name and all letters and numbers 1-10, knows a few sight words, knows all letter sounds.
She's very social and has no issue being separated from me (she goes to all day preschool). The only thing she struggles with a bit is her reaction when things don't go her way. Crying is a natural response for her but it is SO MUCH better than 3-6 months ago, so expecting even more improvement. She loves to learn and her teacher says she's very engaged.
Based off of the feedback above I think she's ok... I'd just heard about some kids reading before kindergarten and got kind of worried. Though, if we held her till 6, I have no doubt she'd be reading before she entered kindergarten. But then she may be frustrated if they're working on things like sounding out letters?
Struggling with this decision of sending a young 5 to kindergarten a bit if you can't tell...
I’m the PP with the August boy and could have written your post word for word!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. My daughter is 4.5 and we are leaning towards starting her in kindergarten this fall (turns 5 late July). She knows all letters and numbers 1-10, can write her name and all letters and numbers 1-10, knows a few sight words, knows all letter sounds.
She's very social and has no issue being separated from me (she goes to all day preschool). The only thing she struggles with a bit is her reaction when things don't go her way. Crying is a natural response for her but it is SO MUCH better than 3-6 months ago, so expecting even more improvement. She loves to learn and her teacher says she's very engaged.
Based off of the feedback above I think she's ok... I'd just heard about some kids reading before kindergarten and got kind of worried. Though, if we held her till 6, I have no doubt she'd be reading before she entered kindergarten. But then she may be frustrated if they're working on things like sounding out letters?
Struggling with this decision of sending a young 5 to kindergarten a bit if you can't tell...
Anonymous wrote:No need to hold her back from your description. I think it depends on the school. I teach in a Title One school and we teach letters and sounds until Thanksgiving or so. Most kids (even ones who have been to our pre-k) don't know them all at the beginning of the year. This is obviously a very different demographic than many schools people from DCUMs send their kids to. What school is she going to?