Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can we call out the emperor with no clothes on?
Redshirting is predominately done by white middle class summer born boys.
Parents say they do it to either reduce a disadvantage ( being the youngest ) or gain an advantage ( be the oldest ). Both of this things, in practice, is identical and only a semantic distinction.
No other age groups of kids get this choice. A kid born in November or March can’t just decide that they want to be the oldest in their class to get a higher class rank. The school rules forbid it.
Now when people call out and shine a light on this disadvantage, parents who’s kids had that option and took advantage of it are gaslighting them. Yes, belittling them saying they are unhinged or over reacting is gaslighting.
If you redshirted your kid you did it for a reason and you don’t get to stop the rest of us from being annoyed at not having the same opportunity.,
why don't others have the same opportunity?
Anonymous wrote:Can we call out the emperor with no clothes on?
Redshirting is predominately done by white middle class summer born boys.
Parents say they do it to either reduce a disadvantage ( being the youngest ) or gain an advantage ( be the oldest ). Both of this things, in practice, is identical and only a semantic distinction.
No other age groups of kids get this choice. A kid born in November or March can’t just decide that they want to be the oldest in their class to get a higher class rank. The school rules forbid it.
Now when people call out and shine a light on this disadvantage, parents who’s kids had that option and took advantage of it are gaslighting them. Yes, belittling them saying they are unhinged or over reacting is gaslighting.
If you redshirted your kid you did it for a reason and you don’t get to stop the rest of us from being annoyed at not having the same opportunity.,
Anonymous wrote:.
If you redshirted your kid you did it for a reason and you don’t get to stop the rest of us from being annoyed at not having the same opportunity.,
Anonymous wrote:Can we call out the emperor with no clothes on?
Redshirting is predominately done by white middle class summer born boys.
Parents say they do it to either reduce a disadvantage ( being the youngest ) or gain an advantage ( be the oldest ). Both of this things, in practice, is identical and only a semantic distinction.
No other age groups of kids get this choice. A kid born in November or March can’t just decide that they want to be the oldest in their class to get a higher class rank. The school rules forbid it.
Now when people call out and shine a light on this disadvantage, parents who’s kids had that option and took advantage of it are gaslighting them. Yes, belittling them saying they are unhinged or over reacting is gaslighting.
If you redshirted your kid you did it for a reason and you don’t get to stop the rest of us from being annoyed at not having the same opportunity.,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't really want to redshirt my July son, since he was mostly ready for kindergarten, but everyone I knew in the same situation was, so I did too.
Did it make you proud that he outperformed kids a year younger than him?
Not PP - but who says he outperformed anyone? That's your weird assumption
Seeing as how a child's abilities grow the older they get, it's only inevitable that they're going to look good next to another child a year younger than them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't really want to redshirt my July son, since he was mostly ready for kindergarten, but everyone I knew in the same situation was, so I did too.
Did it make you proud that he outperformed kids a year younger than him?
Not PP - but who says he outperformed anyone? That's your weird assumption
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't really want to redshirt my July son, since he was mostly ready for kindergarten, but everyone I knew in the same situation was, so I did too.
Did it make you proud that he outperformed kids a year younger than him?
Anonymous wrote:I didn't really want to redshirt my July son, since he was mostly ready for kindergarten, but everyone I knew in the same situation was, so I did too.
Anonymous wrote:Relative age affect is a real documented phenomenon. The youngest children ARE at a disadvantage academically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Relative age affect is a real documented phenomenon. The youngest children ARE at a disadvantage academically.
Then why do most parents with fall-born kids send their child to Kindergarten at 4?
What? Not in the DMV. Fall starts late September and cutoff is either 9/1 or 9/30 for K
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Relative age affect is a real documented phenomenon. The youngest children ARE at a disadvantage academically.
Then why do most parents with fall-born kids send their child to Kindergarten at 4?
Anonymous wrote:Relative age affect is a real documented phenomenon. The youngest children ARE at a disadvantage academically.