Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do it. If your daughter is really bright it would be better for her to be the youngest than the oldest. December would be one of the oldest.
Omg, please stop basing this outlook on dated opinion pieces.
Actually if it’s a sept 1st cutoff sept bdays will be the oldest. And there will be more of them than you think.
I said “one“ of the oldest. And I say that as a parent of a DD who barely missed cutoff and I‘m going to “greenshirt“. All these people who redshirt have no clue how slow our education system is for even remotely bright children who ought to be challenged.
LOL. So your kid isn’t even in school yet. Trust me, the young kids struggle socially.-Parent of college kids
NP. Not always, social maturity is not always a function of calendar age.
Ok, you do you. When a kid is 12-18 months younger than everyone else...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do it. If your daughter is really bright it would be better for her to be the youngest than the oldest. December would be one of the oldest.
Omg, please stop basing this outlook on dated opinion pieces.
Actually if it’s a sept 1st cutoff sept bdays will be the oldest. And there will be more of them than you think.
I said “one“ of the oldest. And I say that as a parent of a DD who barely missed cutoff and I‘m going to “greenshirt“. All these people who redshirt have no clue how slow our education system is for even remotely bright children who ought to be challenged.
LOL. So your kid isn’t even in school yet. Trust me, the young kids struggle socially.-Parent of college kids
NP. Not always, social maturity is not always a function of calendar age.
Anonymous wrote:We said no to this with our precocious Fall birthday kids, and now as we approach sending a kid off to college, we are so, so, so glad we didn't cave and start school too early. I would not be happy with a 16YO high school senior in class with 18YO boys, or having a kid in college who is at risk for underaged drinking violations until second semester senior year.
If your school cannot differentiate instruction well, then you need a new school. Don't make your child the victim of the school's inability to teach to a range of students. Our kids were in a public school that did in class differentiation very well, so academic and social needs were met in the same place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do it. If your daughter is really bright it would be better for her to be the youngest than the oldest. December would be one of the oldest.
Omg, please stop basing this outlook on dated opinion pieces.
Actually if it’s a sept 1st cutoff sept bdays will be the oldest. And there will be more of them than you think.
I said “one“ of the oldest. And I say that as a parent of a DD who barely missed cutoff and I‘m going to “greenshirt“. All these people who redshirt have no clue how slow our education system is for even remotely bright children who ought to be challenged.
LOL. So your kid isn’t even in school yet. Trust me, the young kids struggle socially.-Parent of college kids
Anonymous wrote:We said no to this with our precocious Fall birthday kids, and now as we approach sending a kid off to college, we are so, so, so glad we didn't cave and start school too early. I would not be happy with a 16YO high school senior in class with 18YO boys, or having a kid in college who is at risk for underaged drinking violations until second semester senior year.
If your school cannot differentiate instruction well, then you need a new school. Don't make your child the victim of the school's inability to teach to a range of students. Our kids were in a public school that did in class differentiation very well, so academic and social needs were met in the same place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do it. If your daughter is really bright it would be better for her to be the youngest than the oldest. December would be one of the oldest.
Omg, please stop basing this outlook on dated opinion pieces.
Actually if it’s a sept 1st cutoff sept bdays will be the oldest. And there will be more of them than you think.
I said “one“ of the oldest. And I say that as a parent of a DD who barely missed cutoff and I‘m going to “greenshirt“. All these people who redshirt have no clue how slow our education system is for even remotely bright children who ought to be challenged.
Anonymous wrote:I went to K with a "next April" birthday. I.e., I didn't turn 5 until the end of the K school year.
I was gifted and went to gifted programs 4-12.
I... I don't think "1st grade level" is all that advanced. It's advanced! Maybe gifted! But it's not prima facie evidence that someone should be started early.
For the record it was the right decision for me in terms of academics, but probably not socially.