Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason parents do this is simple: many, many 5yos, especially boys, are not physically ready to sit quietly for a full-day class working on fine-motor tasks like writing with only one short recess period per day. That is not an age-appropriate expectation, but it is what we expect of kindergarteners now. I have the money to send my wiggly 5-year-old who struggles with handwriting into a private school with lots of outdoor time and small class sizes that allow him to learn at his own speed. But if I had to go public or redshirt, you can bet I'd be redshirting in a heartbeat.
That is what they are supposed to learn in preschool. Instead everything is play based and they are not gaining the skills to sit down, work, follow directions. My 3 year old who is very active with delays can sit, no recess for hours to get work done. Look at your parenting and the school. We changed preschools form 2-3. The two had no expectations but to play. He is now in a very structured program, with some play, and is thriving. I think its a general assumption like you are making and it does not apply to all kids. If we have to hold back our child due to birthday, it will be a disaster as there are few affordable that are a true prek that will give him the academic and other skills he needs. You supplement with physical activities after school, but I want school to be a learning process with academics. He can get plenty of park and activity time after school and on the weekends.
Try an OT for the handwriting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know. It's weird that my 4 year old is in a kindergarten class with a boy who just turned 7.
This happens in K-1 classes, but from your post, it doesn't sound like a K-1 class.
When will your 4 year old be turning 5?
Anonymous wrote:I'm forced to hold DD back - her birthday is 10/15 and stupid ass FCPS won't let her test into kindergarten 2 weeks before she turns 5. Nope, let's waste an entire year and do NOTHING (with regard to her as she has to sit home for a whole year whereas in MOCO she'd be in K). Even if she reads, writes, adds, subtracts, they DON'T GIVE A F.
FCPS elementary school bureaucrats are the laziest bunch in the DC area I swear. God forbid they had to actually work a FULL 5-day workweek. God forbid they actually had to put some kind of effort into testing students to see if they are ready to enter kindergarten a couple weeks before their 5th birthday.
Anonymous wrote:I'm forced to hold DD back - her birthday is 10/15 and stupid ass FCPS won't let her test into kindergarten 2 weeks before she turns 5. Nope, let's waste an entire year and do NOTHING (with regard to her as she has to sit home for a whole year whereas in MOCO she'd be in K). Even if she reads, writes, adds, subtracts, they DON'T GIVE A F.
FCPS elementary school bureaucrats are the laziest bunch in the DC area I swear. God forbid they had to actually work a FULL 5-day workweek. God forbid they actually had to put some kind of effort into testing students to see if they are ready to enter kindergarten a couple weeks before their 5th birthday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is totally annoying is that the sports don't coincide with the school cutoff. It's almost as if these sports teams are trying to get kids to redshirt. Why have a July 1st or July 31st cutoff when the school cutoff is Sept. 30? People should be asking these sports teams to change their cutoffs to at least Sept. 1st if not Sept. 30th. There's no reason children in August and Sept. should have to play on teams 1 year less than the year they are going to school for and have to compete against kids over a year apart from them if they do want to play with their school friends. I'm sure this is the real reason 3 of the 5 older kids I knew redshirted. That and to possibly have a better chance to get into AAP.
Agreed. I'm told from many parents they do it with boys to hope they get college scholarships in sports. If a kid is that good, a year many not make a difference.
Anonymous wrote:What is totally annoying is that the sports don't coincide with the school cutoff. It's almost as if these sports teams are trying to get kids to redshirt. Why have a July 1st or July 31st cutoff when the school cutoff is Sept. 30? People should be asking these sports teams to change their cutoffs to at least Sept. 1st if not Sept. 30th. There's no reason children in August and Sept. should have to play on teams 1 year less than the year they are going to school for and have to compete against kids over a year apart from them if they do want to play with their school friends. I'm sure this is the real reason 3 of the 5 older kids I knew redshirted. That and to possibly have a better chance to get into AAP.