Anonymous wrote:August Twin Boys - - Yes. And I don't like red-shirting, but Op you should. Most of all, you should keep them in the same grade. There is a strong likelihood one of them needs red shirting. Twins are usually behind. And they're boys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If parents are just going to redshirt every kid born in Sept/Aug why not just make the cutoff July 30 instead of Sept 30? Same result.
States and school districts are increasingly moving the cutoff up to July 30th, especially as the trend is also for an earlier start to the school year. I’m sure a 9/30 cutoff made sense back when K was half-day and school started after Labor Day, and when 1st grade was when many kids learned to read, and when there was barely any standardized testing until middle school. But now maybe an earlier cutoff makes sense.
And no, it’s not “cheating” or whatever PP wants to say - it’s explicitly allowed by the public and private schools in this area.
So you see nothing wrong with 2 kids in the same grade being more than 365 days apart? It's perfectly okay with you if the youngest kid doesn't turn 5 before the oldest kid turns 6?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If parents are just going to redshirt every kid born in Sept/Aug why not just make the cutoff July 30 instead of Sept 30? Same result.
Then the parents of kids born in May/June/July will be wringing their hands about when to send their kid to school. Someone has to be the youngest.
My kid was born in mid-September and went to K a couple months before he turned 5. He is thriving academically, has been the top of his class every year, and will be in AAP next year. He's got friends and is OK socially. He does seem to have some trouble with impulse control and I get calls from the school every couple months. I'm guessing waiting a year might have helped this, and will always question our decision. But... I have a feeling we would have had different issues if he'd been the oldest and the smartest in the class instead of the youngest and the smartest.
Anonymous wrote:If parents are just going to redshirt every kid born in Sept/Aug why not just make the cutoff July 30 instead of Sept 30? Same result.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If parents are just going to redshirt every kid born in Sept/Aug why not just make the cutoff July 30 instead of Sept 30? Same result.
States and school districts are increasingly moving the cutoff up to July 30th, especially as the trend is also for an earlier start to the school year. I’m sure a 9/30 cutoff made sense back when K was half-day and school started after Labor Day, and when 1st grade was when many kids learned to read, and when there was barely any standardized testing until middle school. But now maybe an earlier cutoff makes sense.
And no, it’s not “cheating” or whatever PP wants to say - it’s explicitly allowed by the public and private schools in this area.
So you see nothing wrong with 2 kids in the same grade being more than 365 days apart? It's perfectly okay with you if the youngest kid doesn't turn 5 before the oldest kid turns 6?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If parents are just going to redshirt every kid born in Sept/Aug why not just make the cutoff July 30 instead of Sept 30? Same result.
States and school districts are increasingly moving the cutoff up to July 30th, especially as the trend is also for an earlier start to the school year. I’m sure a 9/30 cutoff made sense back when K was half-day and school started after Labor Day, and when 1st grade was when many kids learned to read, and when there was barely any standardized testing until middle school. But now maybe an earlier cutoff makes sense.
And no, it’s not “cheating” or whatever PP wants to say - it’s explicitly allowed by the public and private schools in this area.
Anonymous wrote:If parents are just going to redshirt every kid born in Sept/Aug why not just make the cutoff July 30 instead of Sept 30? Same result.
Anonymous wrote:If parents are just going to redshirt every kid born in Sept/Aug why not just make the cutoff July 30 instead of Sept 30? Same result.
Anonymous wrote:Personally I think it should be based on the child's needs not parents ideals. My child didn't thrive at a play based program. We removed him to a structured academic program and he thrived. Play based are probably why kids are not prepared for K. K. is not academic at all.
That is so sad that your child does not enjoy playing.
A good play based K program is the best. Perhaps, your program did not have good teachers. There is a lot more structure in a good play based program than you know.
I was a K teacher back in the day. A play based program does not exclude academics. Every child in my class (which was socio-economically diverse) was reading by the end of the year--with the exception of a very bright child with a learning disabilty. And, FWIW, the cut off was DEC 31 in those days.
A good play based program encourages thinking skills which are not developed as much in a so-called "academic" program where the children are drilled and controlled all day.
I especially remember the wonderful large blocks that we had in my class. I would randomly assigned groups which changed from week to week. At the beginning of the year the kids would take the blocks and build by themselves. By the end of the year, they were working with their group to build wonderful "cities." They were learning to work together and develop terrific learning skills.
So sad that is no longer happening.
Personally I think it should be based on the child's needs not parents ideals. My child didn't thrive at a play based program. We removed him to a structured academic program and he thrived. Play based are probably why kids are not prepared for K. K. is not academic at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I had to do it over, I would have had all of my kids born in August and I would have redshirted them. Even the girls.
Why not just have all your kids in January, so that they would be the oldest by default?
Holy sh*t you are really not getting it. The cutoff isn’t 12/31 here!!!!! It’s only 12/31 or 12/1 in your little NYC-area bubble. The entire rest of the country has a cutoff of 9/30 or earlier. A kid with a January birthday is middle of the pack, birthday/age-wise.
Okay, so in that case, they should have all their kids in October. The bottom line, if you want child to be the oldest, you should have them right after the cut-off, whenever that is. Then you don't have to worry about redshirting. The point I'm trying to make is that parents who redshirt their kids are breaking the rules to fix a problem that they created for themselves.