Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Forced to group? Oh the humanity! Go with the group you are supposed to be with. Isn’t that the entire point of the anti redshirters? I have a late summer birthday kid and he has friends in both grades. He has never complained about this grave injustice. Maybe your kid needs help with social skills.
I think you are being willfully obtuse.
If different activities have different cut offs, then some kids will be grouped with one cohort for one activity (school for example) and a different group for a different activitiy (Swimming or hockey for example)
So going with "the one you are supposed to be with" puts some people in a position of having different groups, or not being able to participate with their friends.
You are being willfully difficult. Your snowflakes doesn’t always get what they want. Camps and teams often split kids up anyway. Teach your kids to be flexible and resilient. Thought they were too smart and mature to even contemplate redshirting. You sure abut that?
Anonymous wrote:The sad truth is that a there are lot of parents out there who shouldn't be parents. After 5 years, most parents miss the alone time they used to have before becoming parents and are too stingy too pay for another year of daycare. Therefore, they just want to hurry their child off to school so can get those old times back. Subsequently, this means their child will go off to college earlier and they'll be alone in the house 24/7.
Anonymous wrote:You are trying way too hard and are just wrong. Age groupings are just as arbitrary. Why does swim team have an August 1 cutoff, school has a Sept 30 cutoff, some sports have a calendar year cut off, and camp has a requirement that you be the age at the time of registration (so anywhere between January and July, if the camp doesn't fill up)? Peers aren't limited to those born the same month as you.Anonymous wrote:
Social groupings matter. Classmates matter. It's not a race to finish your education before you die.
Anonymous wrote:I was a non-redshirted late September birthday. I started college as a 17 year old.
Parents should make decisions based on what is best for their kids. DS is a late June birthday, we started him on time. He is annoyed that he cannot play many sports with his friends, in the same grade, because they were born in a different year. Academically he is great, he was accepted into AAP even though he is the third youngest kid in his class.
And yes, he knows he is the third youngest, not because we told him but because his classmates discuss when their birthdays are. He also knows the kids who are older because the kids discuss their birthdays and ages. The oldest kid in the class told me, in first grade, that he was in a different Den for Cub Scouts then my DS because he was older so he wanted to be in the older Den. I didn't ask him, he saw me at a Pack meeting and told me. Said kid has also told his classmates what other things he can do, different camps and the like, because he is older then they are. How do I know? My kid came home and said he wanted to do camp X next summer because it sounded cool but he was too young. So yes, some of the kids who are red shirted know about it and seem to care.
I suspect that the youngest/oldest stories fall over a wide range of responses based on the kids personalities and home environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My non-redshirted kid will be 18 his entire senior year.
and my red-shirted kid will be 18 her entire senior year.
Then your kid isn't redshirted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Forced to group? Oh the humanity! Go with the group you are supposed to be with. Isn’t that the entire point of the anti redshirters? I have a late summer birthday kid and he has friends in both grades. He has never complained about this grave injustice. Maybe your kid needs help with social skills.
I think you are being willfully obtuse.
If different activities have different cut offs, then some kids will be grouped with one cohort for one activity (school for example) and a different group for a different activitiy (Swimming or hockey for example)
So going with "the one you are supposed to be with" puts some people in a position of having different groups, or not being able to participate with their friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Forced to group? Oh the humanity! Go with the group you are supposed to be with. Isn’t that the entire point of the anti redshirters? I have a late summer birthday kid and he has friends in both grades. He has never complained about this grave injustice. Maybe your kid needs help with social skills.
I think you are being willfully obtuse.
If different activities have different cut offs, then some kids will be grouped with one cohort for one activity (school for example) and a different group for a different activitiy (Swimming or hockey for example)
So going with "the one you are supposed to be with" puts some people in a position of having different groups, or not being able to participate with their friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My non-redshirted kid will be 18 his entire senior year.
and my red-shirted kid will be 18 her entire senior year.
Then your kid isn't redshirted.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t, because my kid is smart and mature.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, but they are also learning US History as a 18 year old while all of their classmates are 17.
They learned geoemetry when they were 15 when all of their classmates were 14.
They feel dumb because they are the oldest and learning the same things most of their peers a year younger are learning.
Why? because their parents didn't think they could compete with kids their own age, so gave them the "gift of time" so they could be a year older and more mature when learning as compared to their peers.
Huh? My non redshirted kids turn 18 in the fall of senior year. It’s totally normal. The birthdays span at least 12 months in a school year. The kids don’t all have spring birthdays. Did you do any math in school? Pretty sure you are the dumb one.
Yes, your non red shirted kid turns 18 during their senior year. A redshirted kid would turn 19 during their senior year (further towards the end of the year, granted)
NP. That is redshirting for a summer birthday.
No. My redshirted kid will turn 19 two days before he leaves for college. He was 18 his entire senior year.
That isn't redshirting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, but they are also learning US History as a 18 year old while all of their classmates are 17.
They learned geoemetry when they were 15 when all of their classmates were 14.
They feel dumb because they are the oldest and learning the same things most of their peers a year younger are learning.
Why? because their parents didn't think they could compete with kids their own age, so gave them the "gift of time" so they could be a year older and more mature when learning as compared to their peers.
Huh? My non redshirted kids turn 18 in the fall of senior year. It’s totally normal. The birthdays span at least 12 months in a school year. The kids don’t all have spring birthdays. Did you do any math in school? Pretty sure you are the dumb one.
Yes, your non red shirted kid turns 18 during their senior year. A redshirted kid would turn 19 during their senior year (further towards the end of the year, granted)
NP. That is redshirting for a summer birthday.
No. My redshirted kid will turn 19 two days before he leaves for college. He was 18 his entire senior year.
That isn't redshirting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My non-redshirted kid will be 18 his entire senior year.
and my red-shirted kid will be 18 her entire senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, but they are also learning US History as a 18 year old while all of their classmates are 17.
They learned geoemetry when they were 15 when all of their classmates were 14.
They feel dumb because they are the oldest and learning the same things most of their peers a year younger are learning.
Why? because their parents didn't think they could compete with kids their own age, so gave them the "gift of time" so they could be a year older and more mature when learning as compared to their peers.
Huh? My non redshirted kids turn 18 in the fall of senior year. It’s totally normal. The birthdays span at least 12 months in a school year. The kids don’t all have spring birthdays. Did you do any math in school? Pretty sure you are the dumb one.
Yes, your non red shirted kid turns 18 during their senior year. A redshirted kid would turn 19 during their senior year (further towards the end of the year, granted)
No. My redshirted kid will turn 19 two days before he leaves for college. He was 18 his entire senior year.