Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So your kid will turn 7 in kindergarten? Yeah I wouldn't celebrate his 7th birthday with his kinder friends. My son who just finished 2nd grade is still 7.
I agree. That is insane. My child will celebrate their 5th birthday in kindergarten. The fact that your 7 year old may be in class with my 5 year old is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great, a "very physical" and "class clown" child who is a year older and bigger than everyone else.
That is going to be awesome.
+1. His teachers will be ecstatic.
...not to mention he'll be almost 2 years older than the kids with late summer/early fall birthdays. DD's is late August - I'd be pretty pissed if she ended up starting kindergarten as a freshly minted 5yo with a 6 1/2 yo. Absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great, a "very physical" and "class clown" child who is a year older and bigger than everyone else.
That is going to be awesome.
+1. His teachers will be ecstatic.
Anonymous wrote:Great, a "very physical" and "class clown" child who is a year older and bigger than everyone else.
That is going to be awesome.
Anonymous wrote:
We are redshirting our late september twins (cut off is Oct 1). My husband was born the same time of year. He hated starting at four and he hated graduating at 17 and being the youngest. It was tough on him. Personally sending a 17 year old off to college really did not appeal to me.
We talked to their preschool and a few other educators and figure the three days is not a huge deal. I still struggled with it. I thought that they would be the oldest in the class. Guess I am wrong. They will graduate at 18 and be slighly older.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope colleges take note of this weird trend and adjust accordingly. But they won't. This is just a general comment: if a critical mass of people start doing this, there will be social and economic costs to those who don't.
Why would they? Plenty of kids already take a gap year or serve in the military before going to college.
Or spend five years completing a degree. Or go back to school at a later age...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just be prepared that any accomplishment your child makes will be accompanied by a disclaimer "....but he's SO much older, of course he's a better fill-in-the-blank".
Everyone will know by end of kindergarten what you did, and that stigma will me with him. As you can see by this thread, other parents don't like it.
I wouldnt want to saddle my child with that
Don't worry, your vehemence on this issue makes clear you'll provide your kids with their own baggage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope colleges take note of this weird trend and adjust accordingly. But they won't. This is just a general comment: if a critical mass of people start doing this, there will be social and economic costs to those who don't.
Why would they? Plenty of kids already take a gap year or serve in the military before going to college.
Anonymous wrote:I hope colleges take note of this weird trend and adjust accordingly. But they won't. This is just a general comment: if a critical mass of people start doing this, there will be social and economic costs to those who don't.
Anonymous wrote:Just be prepared that any accomplishment your child makes will be accompanied by a disclaimer "....but he's SO much older, of course he's a better fill-in-the-blank".
Everyone will know by end of kindergarten what you did, and that stigma will me with him. As you can see by this thread, other parents don't like it.
I wouldnt want to saddle my child with that
Anonymous wrote:We redshirted my late July girl and regret it now that she is headed to 4th. She doesn't like being the oldest in her class and now I realize she really would have been fine starting on time.
Anonymous wrote:I hope colleges take note of this weird trend and adjust accordingly. But they won't. This is just a general comment: if a critical mass of people start doing this, there will be social and economic costs to those who don't.