Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a bright child who is now in 2nd grade, I can tell you I wish my son was more of an average child. He basically taught himself to read when he was 3 yrs old. So he was reading chapter books by the time he started K. The vast majority of other kids weren't. So he rarely was ever taught at his level. Well, he was never taught at his level. He has spend 3 years fooling around at school and getting in trouble for it. I'll take an average child any day b/c my son thinks school is pure torture. Not a good thing when you go everyday for many many more years.
Maybe is fooling around is more of a parenting issue than an bright child issue. Wow. Your kid is our normal here. Several of the three year olds in our preschool are reading and have other basic skills. Some of it is just exposure at school and home. My kid one day just told us he will read the book, not us and he did. It shocked us. I don't think he's any brighter than any other child, but it would be nice to think he is. We spend a lot of time working with him as he enjoys it.
You do realize that many 3 yo's can "read" books they know by heart, right? Try giving your child a book he has never seen and you'll see how well your kid can "read." Give me a break, honey. My kid can do this too and he can't read, so get over yourself.
I am talking about books that he has never seen. Got a few yesterday and he got all but a few words and almost had those words as he enjoys phonics based learning and sounding them out. There are kids who can read at 3. That's great your kid can memorize, but that is not reading. When I say reading, I mean books or words he has never seen before.
Well that's great. But it's not common, it's not average, and no one should be comparing their child to yours or anyone else's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a bright child who is now in 2nd grade, I can tell you I wish my son was more of an average child. He basically taught himself to read when he was 3 yrs old. So he was reading chapter books by the time he started K. The vast majority of other kids weren't. So he rarely was ever taught at his level. Well, he was never taught at his level. He has spend 3 years fooling around at school and getting in trouble for it. I'll take an average child any day b/c my son thinks school is pure torture. Not a good thing when you go everyday for many many more years.
Maybe is fooling around is more of a parenting issue than an bright child issue. Wow. Your kid is our normal here. Several of the three year olds in our preschool are reading and have other basic skills. Some of it is just exposure at school and home. My kid one day just told us he will read the book, not us and he did. It shocked us. I don't think he's any brighter than any other child, but it would be nice to think he is. We spend a lot of time working with him as he enjoys it.
You do realize that many 3 yo's can "read" books they know by heart, right? Try giving your child a book he has never seen and you'll see how well your kid can "read." Give me a break, honey. My kid can do this too and he can't read, so get over yourself.
I am talking about books that he has never seen. Got a few yesterday and he got all but a few words and almost had those words as he enjoys phonics based learning and sounding them out. There are kids who can read at 3. That's great your kid can memorize, but that is not reading. When I say reading, I mean books or words he has never seen before.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks for all the mostly positive feedback. I'm not feeling terribly anxious about my son, but it is weird to read all these parents discuss what their kids are doing. FWIW, most of my family have pds (myself included), ivyleague educations and were brought up to be super academically achieving (3 professors in 2 generations, etc). I myself was pushed fairly hard as a child, but also was internally driven. I haven't really wanted that for my son, but sort of expected he would be "smart" in a natural, obvious way and take to learning in the way that we did (or supposedly we did). My mom comments frequently how he isn't doing X or Y yet, and that I or my sibling did that when we were that age, so she's gotten under my skin a little. On the other hand, she is kind of crazy and my brother, at least, was abnormal, doing long division and multiplication at 5 and graduating high school at 15. He's a scientist now, but also terribly socially awkward and emotionally repressed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a bright child who is now in 2nd grade, I can tell you I wish my son was more of an average child. He basically taught himself to read when he was 3 yrs old. So he was reading chapter books by the time he started K. The vast majority of other kids weren't. So he rarely was ever taught at his level. Well, he was never taught at his level. He has spend 3 years fooling around at school and getting in trouble for it. I'll take an average child any day b/c my son thinks school is pure torture. Not a good thing when you go everyday for many many more years.
Maybe is fooling around is more of a parenting issue than an bright child issue. Wow. Your kid is our normal here. Several of the three year olds in our preschool are reading and have other basic skills. Some of it is just exposure at school and home. My kid one day just told us he will read the book, not us and he did. It shocked us. I don't think he's any brighter than any other child, but it would be nice to think he is. We spend a lot of time working with him as he enjoys it.
You do realize that many 3 yo's can "read" books they know by heart, right? Try giving your child a book he has never seen and you'll see how well your kid can "read." Give me a break, honey. My kid can do this too and he can't read, so get over yourself.
I am talking about books that he has never seen. Got a few yesterday and he got all but a few words and almost had those words as he enjoys phonics based learning and sounding them out. There are kids who can read at 3. That's great your kid can memorize, but that is not reading. When I say reading, I mean books or words he has never seen before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a bright child who is now in 2nd grade, I can tell you I wish my son was more of an average child. He basically taught himself to read when he was 3 yrs old. So he was reading chapter books by the time he started K. The vast majority of other kids weren't. So he rarely was ever taught at his level. Well, he was never taught at his level. He has spend 3 years fooling around at school and getting in trouble for it. I'll take an average child any day b/c my son thinks school is pure torture. Not a good thing when you go everyday for many many more years.
Maybe is fooling around is more of a parenting issue than an bright child issue. Wow. Your kid is our normal here. Several of the three year olds in our preschool are reading and have other basic skills. Some of it is just exposure at school and home. My kid one day just told us he will read the book, not us and he did. It shocked us. I don't think he's any brighter than any other child, but it would be nice to think he is. We spend a lot of time working with him as he enjoys it.
You do realize that many 3 yo's can "read" books they know by heart, right? Try giving your child a book he has never seen and you'll see how well your kid can "read." Give me a break, honey. My kid can do this too and he can't read, so get over yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it that when people discuss exceptionally bright kids/people they always have to tell some horror story about how X was a genius but he failed at life / is miserable / has no friends? It's as irksome as being hyperfocused on giftedness, athletic ability, whatever.
I think it's because so many people are hyper-focused on their kids being geniuses as the key to happiness in life, so people feel the need to point out that being a genius is no guarantee of anything.
Anonymous wrote:Why is it that when people discuss exceptionally bright kids/people they always have to tell some horror story about how X was a genius but he failed at life / is miserable / has no friends? It's as irksome as being hyperfocused on giftedness, athletic ability, whatever.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks for all the mostly positive feedback. I'm not feeling terribly anxious about my son, but it is weird to read all these parents discuss what their kids are doing. FWIW, most of my family have pds (myself included), ivyleague educations and were brought up to be super academically achieving (3 professors in 2 generations, etc). I myself was pushed fairly hard as a child, but also was internally driven. I haven't really wanted that for my son, but sort of expected he would be "smart" in a natural, obvious way and take to learning in the way that we did (or supposedly we did). My mom comments frequently how he isn't doing X or Y yet, and that I or my sibling did that when we were that age, so she's gotten under my skin a little. On the other hand, she is kind of crazy and my brother, at least, was abnormal, doing long division and multiplication at 5 and graduating high school at 15. He's a scientist now, but also terribly socially awkward and emotionally repressed.