Anonymous wrote:This is part of the problem. You can elect to redshirt, but then you're stuck. Your kid, who had a temporary [whatever] that caused you to question his ability to handle kindergarten is now permanently dealing with being in an inappropriate grade. You can't now skip him up to the proper grade easily or in many cases at all.
If redshirting is no big deal, if parents deciding what their child ready for is something we absolutely support, then holding back and promoting forward should be something that can happen more than once, and with relative ease.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for resurrecting! This is a good spot for me to vent about just such a conversation I had with another mom. Her son is born in another country and for sport's purposes they faked his birthday! I am not kidding, they made his birthday a whole year later. All the kids know it. So there I was talking to this mom, and she goes on and on, how her boy is bored unless he is in honors classes(not AP) and must take every class honors even though he is so busy with his sport and tournaments. And he is same grade as my kid, and then I find out that my "on time kid" is a year ahead in match and science and yes in honors classes! And her whole year older kid is taking on grade math(meaning he is two years behind basically) and science and has tutors 2 hours a day, knowing that he is actually a whole year older! Yes, they are wealthy. I was so ticked off with all her "my precious boy is so smart and bored!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1000
It is truly astonishing that the redhirting thing is so predominant in this area. Sure, when there are special needs or other issues where holding back will truly make a difference, then it makes sense. But I would be willing to wager that about 95% of the parents doing this simply want their otherwise normally functioning kid to be among the older/bigger in their respective grade. It is bad social engineering and sends the message to their kid that their parents didn't think they could hack it with their peer group so held them back so they could spend the rest of their childhood competing against younger kids.
It becomes a race to the bottom as the craziness doesn't end, once one family does it, 5 others follow and the next thing you know, there are 7 year olds in Kindergarten with a raft of parents complaining their little snowflake is too bored in their school. Of course they are, they are a year or two behind where they should be because their parents flunked them back on some stupid perceived age/size value.
I'm not sure its as common as these threads would have you believe. Perhaps in some privates and certain areas of MD and VA (read wealthy) but honestly I don't think its that common for most of the area.
I must live in one of those areas in MD, because almost all summer boys I know get redshirted and some of the girls. As the mother of an August child I find this very frustrating, as I would like to send my child on time. But she will have children in her class more than a year older, many of whom had no real reason to be held back other than the parents want their child to be a leader and and at the top of their class. Unless your child has a "real" issue, send them on time!
And I agree with others, do not bitch about your child being bored if you chose to redshirt! It was your decision- live with it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1000
It is truly astonishing that the redhirting thing is so predominant in this area. Sure, when there are special needs or other issues where holding back will truly make a difference, then it makes sense. But I would be willing to wager that about 95% of the parents doing this simply want their otherwise normally functioning kid to be among the older/bigger in their respective grade. It is bad social engineering and sends the message to their kid that their parents didn't think they could hack it with their peer group so held them back so they could spend the rest of their childhood competing against younger kids.
It becomes a race to the bottom as the craziness doesn't end, once one family does it, 5 others follow and the next thing you know, there are 7 year olds in Kindergarten with a raft of parents complaining their little snowflake is too bored in their school. Of course they are, they are a year or two behind where they should be because their parents flunked them back on some stupid perceived age/size value.
I'm not sure its as common as these threads would have you believe. Perhaps in some privates and certain areas of MD and VA (read wealthy) but honestly I don't think its that common for most of the area.
Anonymous wrote:+1000
It is truly astonishing that the redhirting thing is so predominant in this area. Sure, when there are special needs or other issues where holding back will truly make a difference, then it makes sense. But I would be willing to wager that about 95% of the parents doing this simply want their otherwise normally functioning kid to be among the older/bigger in their respective grade. It is bad social engineering and sends the message to their kid that their parents didn't think they could hack it with their peer group so held them back so they could spend the rest of their childhood competing against younger kids.
It becomes a race to the bottom as the craziness doesn't end, once one family does it, 5 others follow and the next thing you know, there are 7 year olds in Kindergarten with a raft of parents complaining their little snowflake is too bored in their school. Of course they are, they are a year or two behind where they should be because their parents flunked them back on some stupid perceived age/size value.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 1st grader DS just has gotten an invitation to his classmate 8th birthday, when DS will not turn 7 until August. More than 15 months apart in age. This is just weird.
Ordinarily, without redshirting, the range would be 12 months. In this case, the range is about 15 months. I'm not comprehending the weirdness.
Anonymous wrote:My 1st grader DS just has gotten an invitation to his classmate 8th birthday, when DS will not turn 7 until August. More than 15 months apart in age. This is just weird.