Anonymous wrote:No, because I think next school year will probably be affected as well. I think we are looking at 2 or more years of lost schooling. Such a shame for these kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As in turning 5? Or turning 6? (i.e., VA or MD?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When is his birthday?
Her. Mid september birthday
5. And neither. Maine
Also, how could a kid turning 6 in September be cuspy????
Anonymous wrote:With so many people redshirting, the class of 2034 will be very large. Lots of competition for schools, sports, scholarships etc. I'd stick with having my kid go on time.
Anonymous wrote:Yes! My daughter has a July birthday. She hates Zoom, as in will not participate and hides under the table. Her private school is supposed to start in-person 5 days a week in cohorts of 10 kids with 1 teacher. If they change course and go to distance learning, I'm pulling her out and she will do Kindergarten next year. I can't work from home full time and manage 2 kids distance learning, especially when one child is very strong willed and adamant about her dislike of an age inappropriate teaching method. This is the age when you want to create a love of learning. Torturing a child through a year of Zoom is not the way to do it. The academic expectations in 1st grade at our school are a big jump (particularly around writing) and I don't see how she would be ready for that without a year of in-person school.
Anonymous wrote:With so many people redshirting, the class of 2034 will be very large. Lots of competition for schools, sports, scholarships etc. I'd stick with having my kid go on time.
Anonymous wrote:No. Pandemic or not, cheating is never the right answer.