Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter born 14 days before our cutoff and I’m planning to hold her.
This is dumb. Enjoy having an adult in your house still going to high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The redshirting topic has been done to death on this site….
But IMHO holding back/redshirting is pure advantage for your child with zero downside. Always.
Of course the peanut gallery doesn’t like that…it means they resent that you can pay for another year of daycare/preschool (so they might have to, as well).
Not even a question…if you can afford to, redshirt. Your kid will have a huge advantage. And for you, it should be about YOUR child, first and foremost. Others can do as they see fit. Not your problem.
No, it’s not. Being older does not make you smarter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter born 14 days before our cutoff and I’m planning to hold her.
This is dumb. Enjoy having an adult in your house still going to high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The redshirting topic has been done to death on this site….
But IMHO holding back/redshirting is pure advantage for your child with zero downside. Always.
Of course the peanut gallery doesn’t like that…it means they resent that you can pay for another year of daycare/preschool (so they might have to, as well).
Not even a question…if you can afford to, redshirt. Your kid will have a huge advantage. And for you, it should be about YOUR child, first and foremost. Others can do as they see fit. Not your problem.
No, it’s not. Being older does not make you smarter.
Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter born 14 days before our cutoff and I’m planning to hold her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the issue is that kindergarten is too academic and it can be hard for kids to sit still. The research is so clear that play based curriculums are best for preschool, and it is a really abrupt shift to kindergarten, at least in most settings I am familiar with.
I don’t think you can decide now. I’d wait until it’s time to apply/register for K and decide based on what happens based on where your child is at that point. Although older kids often do better, plenty of young ones do fine too.
Its not too academic. Its school. Play based is not best for all kids. We removed our child from a play based preschool to a more academic one where they thrived and were prepared. People like you don't prepare their kids and then have all kinds of excuses.
Uh okay. My kids are doing great in school so I don’t need excuses. Nevertheless I thought most agreed that K these days has too much sitting, too much testing, too much pressure. I think it’s a shame but my kids have been fine thank you.
Then why not homeschool. You are making excuses and pushes others to hike back to justify your actions. Your kids are not age appropriate and that’s not healthy. I us not to much sitting and texting is necessary to make sure they are on target and don’t need extra help. How is k pressure? K is if anything very basic for those of us who worked with our kids and prepared them. I thought it was a huge waste of time as it was basically a holding grade so kids like yours could catch up to mine.
Anonymous wrote:The redshirting topic has been done to death on this site….
But IMHO holding back/redshirting is pure advantage for your child with zero downside. Always.
Of course the peanut gallery doesn’t like that…it means they resent that you can pay for another year of daycare/preschool (so they might have to, as well).
Not even a question…if you can afford to, redshirt. Your kid will have a huge advantage. And for you, it should be about YOUR child, first and foremost. Others can do as they see fit. Not your problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the issue is that kindergarten is too academic and it can be hard for kids to sit still. The research is so clear that play based curriculums are best for preschool, and it is a really abrupt shift to kindergarten, at least in most settings I am familiar with.
I don’t think you can decide now. I’d wait until it’s time to apply/register for K and decide based on what happens based on where your child is at that point. Although older kids often do better, plenty of young ones do fine too.
Its not too academic. Its school. Play based is not best for all kids. We removed our child from a play based preschool to a more academic one where they thrived and were prepared. People like you don't prepare their kids and then have all kinds of excuses.
Uh okay. My kids are doing great in school so I don’t need excuses. Nevertheless I thought most agreed that K these days has too much sitting, too much testing, too much pressure. I think it’s a shame but my kids have been fine thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the issue is that kindergarten is too academic and it can be hard for kids to sit still. The research is so clear that play based curriculums are best for preschool, and it is a really abrupt shift to kindergarten, at least in most settings I am familiar with.
I don’t think you can decide now. I’d wait until it’s time to apply/register for K and decide based on what happens based on where your child is at that point. Although older kids often do better, plenty of young ones do fine too.
Its not too academic. Its school. Play based is not best for all kids. We removed our child from a play based preschool to a more academic one where they thrived and were prepared. People like you don't prepare their kids and then have all kinds of excuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter born 14 days before our cutoff and I’m planning to hold her.
Also… I actually have three kids with fall birthdays (we’re in NY where the public school cutoff is 12/31 but most private schools are 9/1 or 10/1, except for ours). I held my oldest back, a boy, no brainer. My girls are 6 weeks and 2 weeks before the cutoff. While I think tbe decision is more nuanced for girls, I think that kids are pressured to grow up too fast these days. If they are close to the cut off and I can buy them an extra year of childhood, extra play based time, extra time without a phone, or sleepaway camps, or the pressure of high school, social media… I think that’s a good thing.
My oldest is in kindergarten (he turned 6 instead of 5) and it’s a very long, highly structured day. They get one hour of lunch and recess and that’s it for outdoor time.
Anonymous wrote:Almost all modern research done with the current kindergarten curriculum points to kids, boys especially but all kids, doing drastically better at 6 rather than 5. Statistically, 5 year olds struggle an unnecessary amount more than 6 year olds.
And yes, DCUM poster whose 5 year old did *fantastic* in K and who can never ever ever IMAGINE someone making a different decision, we have heard you. Over and over again. Your anecdotal experience is not relevant when there is a plethora of data available.
Anonymous wrote:I think the issue is that kindergarten is too academic and it can be hard for kids to sit still. The research is so clear that play based curriculums are best for preschool, and it is a really abrupt shift to kindergarten, at least in most settings I am familiar with.
I don’t think you can decide now. I’d wait until it’s time to apply/register for K and decide based on what happens based on where your child is at that point. Although older kids often do better, plenty of young ones do fine too.
Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter born 14 days before our cutoff and I’m planning to hold her.