Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you really think it matters if a child as 4 years and 28 days on day 1 or 5 years and 2 days? Whever the deadlines is there will always be someone just before or just after and there will always be parents who think there child is ready to go early and parents who think there child is better off waiting.
Nope! 5 is a solid number. Just like you vote at 17, drive at 16, legally drink at 21. 5 by K makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Do you really think it matters if a child as 4 years and 28 days on day 1 or 5 years and 2 days? Whever the deadlines is there will always be someone just before or just after and there will always be parents who think there child is ready to go early and parents who think there child is better off waiting.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I love Montessori. Kids progress at their own pace in a developmentally-appropriate environment in a mixed age classroom. They can be doing long division by the time they're 6, or they can be reading chapter books, or neither or both. There is no artificial list of skills every child must have by a certain age. Then they can move to a mixed-age elementary classroom at age 6 and continue to develop on whatever path they're on. Research has shown that there is a wide range of normal in reaching academic milestones before age 9 or so, so the Montessori model best reflects the actual reality of children's cognitive development. It is a national tragedy that most schools are so out of sync with reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you be held back - Sept 30 is the cut off - you would already be 5 in KG turning 6!!
No, I was 4 when I started K. I didn't turn 5 until December and was 17 when I graduated.
The age cut-off was changed back in the mid-eighties, so it has been a long time since kids turning five in December were starting K when they are still four. Also, the K curriculum has changed substantially since that time.
Anonymous wrote:agree - the date should be moved. ALL kids should be 5 before KG.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you be held back - Sept 30 is the cut off - you would already be 5 in KG turning 6!!
No, I was 4 when I started K. I didn't turn 5 until December and was 17 when I graduated.
This was meant to be my path in school as well, except that they skipped me when it was time for fourth grade, so I was 16 at graduation.
And look where you ended up: posting at 9:30 in the morning about who cares events that happened 30 years ago. So sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you be held back - Sept 30 is the cut off - you would already be 5 in KG turning 6!!
No, I was 4 when I started K. I didn't turn 5 until December and was 17 when I graduated.
The age cut-off was changed back in the mid-eighties, so it has been a long time since kids turning five in December were starting K when they are still four. Also, the K curriculum has changed substantially since that time.
Wait. Things change? Kids are different? Different things work for different families? So I can send my kid to school when the school permits and when I feel it's best? Cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you be held back - Sept 30 is the cut off - you would already be 5 in KG turning 6!!
No, I was 4 when I started K. I didn't turn 5 until December and was 17 when I graduated.
The age cut-off was changed back in the mid-eighties, so it has been a long time since kids turning five in December were starting K when they are still four. Also, the K curriculum has changed substantially since that time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you be held back - Sept 30 is the cut off - you would already be 5 in KG turning 6!!
No, I was 4 when I started K. I didn't turn 5 until December and was 17 when I graduated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you be held back - Sept 30 is the cut off - you would already be 5 in KG turning 6!!
No, I was 4 when I started K. I didn't turn 5 until December and was 17 when I graduated.
This was meant to be my path in school as well, except that they skipped me when it was time for fourth grade, so I was 16 at graduation.