Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You will not be let in. I’m sorry. Especially this year. First of all your kid needs to be at a first grade level to pass (it does not test kindergarten readiness but end of kinder benchmarks) and second of all the school can say no if they are overcrowded which they will be due to read shirting because everyone who could held their kid back to avoid virtual kinder hell. Let us know where you live and we can give preschool recs. Sorry, I know of sucks. Happened to my son (9/2 birthday) but ended up working out.
Agree. There is enough discretion in the test that they can just say your child didn't pass one of the sections if they don't want to let the kid in. Our kid was meeting some end-of-K measures and all middle-of-K measures when she took the test, and she was denied--when I got more info, I found out that the principal simply doesn't allow kids to pass the test and get in early. In the end it was fine--my daughter with an early Sept bday is perfectly fine as one of the oldest in the class.
It really is up to the principal. Ours would net let us test. Your child can pass everything on the test and still get denied early entry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You will not be let in. I’m sorry. Especially this year. First of all your kid needs to be at a first grade level to pass (it does not test kindergarten readiness but end of kinder benchmarks) and second of all the school can say no if they are overcrowded which they will be due to read shirting because everyone who could held their kid back to avoid virtual kinder hell. Let us know where you live and we can give preschool recs. Sorry, I know of sucks. Happened to my son (9/2 birthday) but ended up working out.
Agree. There is enough discretion in the test that they can just say your child didn't pass one of the sections if they don't want to let the kid in. Our kid was meeting some end-of-K measures and all middle-of-K measures when she took the test, and she was denied--when I got more info, I found out that the principal simply doesn't allow kids to pass the test and get in early. In the end it was fine--my daughter with an early Sept bday is perfectly fine as one of the oldest in the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s going to be a monster class of kindergartners this fall because of covid redshirting. It’s not the year to push ahead.
This. Not worth it considering what happened this year with school and the pandemic, and due to MCPS ‘s large classes sizes to begin with.
News Flash:
Ratios can be even higher for smaller overall classes
50 K kids in a school will be 25 in each class
60 K kids in a school be 20 in each class
70 K kids in a school will be 23 in each class
80 K kids in a school will be 20 in each class
CLASS SIZES HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH HOW MANY K KIDS ARE IN YOUR SCHOOL
This is a concept DCUM parents can not wrap their head around. It is funny watching people cry about more kids equal more kids in each class.
Anonymous wrote:You will not be let in. I’m sorry. Especially this year. First of all your kid needs to be at a first grade level to pass (it does not test kindergarten readiness but end of kinder benchmarks) and second of all the school can say no if they are overcrowded which they will be due to read shirting because everyone who could held their kid back to avoid virtual kinder hell. Let us know where you live and we can give preschool recs. Sorry, I know of sucks. Happened to my son (9/2 birthday) but ended up working out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s going to be a monster class of kindergartners this fall because of covid redshirting. It’s not the year to push ahead.
This. Not worth it considering what happened this year with school and the pandemic, and due to MCPS ‘s large classes sizes to begin with.
News Flash:
Ratios can be even higher for smaller overall classes
50 K kids in a school will be 25 in each class
60 K kids in a school be 20 in each class
70 K kids in a school will be 23 in each class
80 K kids in a school will be 20 in each class
CLASS SIZES HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH HOW MANY K KIDS ARE IN YOUR SCHOOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am shocked that there are still parents who red shirt. The curriculum is SO SO SO slow and Sept 1 cut off is WAY WAY WAY too old. I personally think any child with any preschool history will do fine in K. It is so ungodly easy. All of the ES curriculum is so easy.
So many states have LEA options and the kids can and DO start at 4 years old and 7 months if they choose. The fact that some people in this state wait until their kids is over 6 years old to be in kindergarten is unreal.
Graduating high school at 19 is embarrassing. If they go to a a mid Atlantic or NE college, they will be older than most sophomores in college.
Agree. The curriculum is way too slow. And the whole it goes by too fast. How selfish is that? You are going to dumb your kids down for an extra year with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am shocked that there are still parents who red shirt. The curriculum is SO SO SO slow and Sept 1 cut off is WAY WAY WAY too old. I personally think any child with any preschool history will do fine in K. It is so ungodly easy. All of the ES curriculum is so easy.
So many states have LEA options and the kids can and DO start at 4 years old and 7 months if they choose. The fact that some people in this state wait until their kids is over 6 years old to be in kindergarten is unreal.
Graduating high school at 19 is embarrassing. If they go to a a mid Atlantic or NE college, they will be older than most sophomores in college.
Agree. The curriculum is way too slow. And the whole it goes by too fast. How selfish is that? You are going to dumb your kids down for an extra year with you?
Anonymous wrote:I am shocked that there are still parents who red shirt. The curriculum is SO SO SO slow and Sept 1 cut off is WAY WAY WAY too old. I personally think any child with any preschool history will do fine in K. It is so ungodly easy. All of the ES curriculum is so easy.
So many states have LEA options and the kids can and DO start at 4 years old and 7 months if they choose. The fact that some people in this state wait until their kids is over 6 years old to be in kindergarten is unreal.
Graduating high school at 19 is embarrassing. If they go to a a mid Atlantic or NE college, they will be older than most sophomores in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s going to be a monster class of kindergartners this fall because of covid redshirting. It’s not the year to push ahead.
This. Not worth it considering what happened this year with school and the pandemic, and due to MCPS ‘s large classes sizes to begin with.
Anonymous wrote:I would wait personally. I regret putting my child in K early. Child was academically advanced, socially made lots of friends and was happy but as she gets older I wish I had given her another year of her childhood. It's going too fast for both of her and for me.
This is a flexible and friendly child who did not care academics were easy in elementary and would have been fine making friends in the class after hers too.