Anonymous wrote:You couldn't overthink this any more if you tried. I would not be at ALL surprised if you wrote these things out on a piece of paper. An Excel spreadsheet could be involved.
You need to unclench. You need to let this unfold however they unfold, and deal with whatever comes up. You can't predict or control or prepare. Relax.
Anonymous wrote:I have a rising 3rd grade girl who just turned 8, but I’m posting here because I am hoping to understand and anticipate some of the challenges of being the youngest in a grade with far older girls. Has anyone experienced this?
She is at a private k-8 and there are occasional cohorts with big age spans, but her grade’s is especially pronounced due to pandemic repeats and redshirts. In the past, these cohorts have had ugly social problems in 6th/7th grade and there are occasionally gender imbalances or small grades that reflect girls leaving the school to escape the situation. I’d love to avoid that.
Girls in her grade are on average 6 months older than her but 25% of them are 18-22 months older. The older girls all happen to have middle school siblings. In 3rd grade, my daughter will have classmates turning 10. The current downsides of this that I’ve noticed are that my daughter is always a little behind socially in the fall, and that some of her classmates are trying on tween behavior, language, and social stuff. It was rough to parent a 2nd grader through what felt like middle school social dynamics, and I’m not looking forward to more of that this year. Some of the girls are also going through puberty at a developmentally appropriate but atypical-for-grade age, which has its own complications.
Do any parents of middle school or high school girls have advice for me for successfully parenting a girl who is young for her grade cohort?
I’m being specific to girls because I feel like the impact of redshirting on boy cohorts has been discussed here to death, but I haven’t found the same kind of advice for parents of girls.
Anonymous wrote:IME it's not the girls' ages, it's the girls that have older, "mature" siblings that are the absolute worst. They start drama early, they bully early, they start dressing and acting much older than they are around 4th grade. Happened with both of my girls. My older one is an introvert and had such a hard time. My younger one saw what happened to my older daughter and, I think, was extra careful with her social interactions.
Anonymous wrote:I have a rising 2nd grader and about 50 percent of the boys are redshirted. (Very affluent public school). January 2015-August 2015 birthdays all redshirted. My son is the second youngest boy out of 50 kids and he’s May 2016. He’s been ok and held his own. It doesn’t hurt he’s good at sports and in the 90 percentile for height but I definitely do notice he seems less mature and savvy than some of his peers, mostly other boys who play sports year round like he does (these tend to be the families that redshirt), who are on average about a year older than him. I’m hoping with time the gap gets smaller or he continues to hold his own and it’s not a major issue. I don’t anticipate he will ever be a leader in this peer group just from what I see of the current dynamics but he is well liked and has many friends so I try not to worry too much about it. I told him when you have a May birthday your parents get to choose whether to send you early and late and I felt he was smart and ready and sent him early. I was hoping that empowered him a little since he’s started to notice he’s one of the younger ones. Academically he’s doing fine. Not gifted but tests well and on grade level.
Anonymous wrote:Probably OP was confused and did the math wrong. I have a summer bday kid and they went to school on time (so will turn 8 right before 3rd grade starts, just like OP’s kid). My kid is the 3rd youngest kid in the grade. The youngest was born august 31 (born August 2014) and the oldest kid in the grade turned 9 in May (born May 2013). So oldest and youngest are 15 months apart, not 18-22 months apart as OP claims. Even at small private schools, there are not more than a few kids born between September-April who are held back/“redshirted. generally only June-August bday kids and rarely April-May birthday kids are redshirted, meaning the largest possible age gap would be 16 months and even that would be a very rare April redshirt. Most redshirted are still only 11-13 months older than the summer bday kids who go on time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably OP was confused and did the math wrong. I have a summer bday kid and they went to school on time (so will turn 8 right before 3rd grade starts, just like OP’s kid). My kid is the 3rd youngest kid in the grade. The youngest was born august 31 (born August 2014) and the oldest kid in the grade turned 9 in May (born May 2013). So oldest and youngest are 15 months apart, not 18-22 months apart as OP claims. Even at small private schools, there are not more than a few kids born between September-April who are held back/“redshirted. generally only June-August bday kids and rarely April-May birthday kids are redshirted, meaning the largest possible age gap would be 16 months and even that would be a very rare April redshirt. Most redshirted are still only 11-13 months older than the summer bday kids who go on time.
Last born in May is not normal. Last born usually is August-September, maybe October/November. That might be your school but that's not normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A quarter of the girls will be 10 by Christmas of 3rd grade? I have trouble believing that.
My kid goes to an all boys private with a huge amount of redshirting and reclassing, and the rates aren't near that high.
No, a quarter of the girls will be turning 10 between Christmas and February. And yes, I agree that it is unusual. But this is a group that also absorbed a decent amount of 2019-20 kindergarten repeats from public schools (they missed 3 months of kindergarten, essentially) and a few other complicated situations.
So 25% of her classmates were held back, not for 1 year, but for 2 years? Sounds like you need to switch schools.
This was probably due to the pandemic given OP’s kid’s age, and it’s going to be the case at most schools.
Um…no. I have a kid who just finished 2nd so same grade as OP’s kid (pandemic led to schools closed at end of 4k preschool and virtual school for kindergarten) no one was held back 2 years. The oldest kid in my kid’s class turned 9 in May of 2nd grade (so her bday is May 2014). Not sure I really believe OP that some kids are 22 months older than hers and in the same grade. So she’s saying there’s a September 2013 born kid and a July 2015 born kid in the same grade? No way unless the older kid has severe learning disorder or health issues. Certainly not 25% of girls in the grade are that much older.
at some weird private school, who the hell knows what they allow. they may very well allow a kindy-redshirted kid to be held back in later grades. absolute madness, but a private school can do what it wants for the most part.
Private schools want more $$ money so obviously they want more redshirted kids!! Ha they will hold them back as much as they can so their parents pay extra tuition! But still I have never heard of a kid born in September being held back unless they have severe issues—learning disorder or health problems.
Anonymous wrote:Probably OP was confused and did the math wrong. I have a summer bday kid and they went to school on time (so will turn 8 right before 3rd grade starts, just like OP’s kid). My kid is the 3rd youngest kid in the grade. The youngest was born august 31 (born August 2014) and the oldest kid in the grade turned 9 in May (born May 2013). So oldest and youngest are 15 months apart, not 18-22 months apart as OP claims. Even at small private schools, there are not more than a few kids born between September-April who are held back/“redshirted. generally only June-August bday kids and rarely April-May birthday kids are redshirted, meaning the largest possible age gap would be 16 months and even that would be a very rare April redshirt. Most redshirted are still only 11-13 months older than the summer bday kids who go on time.
Anonymous wrote:Probably OP was confused and did the math wrong. I have a summer bday kid and they went to school on time (so will turn 8 right before 3rd grade starts, just like OP’s kid). My kid is the 3rd youngest kid in the grade. The youngest was born august 31 (born August 2014) and the oldest kid in the grade turned 9 in May (born May 2013). So oldest and youngest are 15 months apart, not 18-22 months apart as OP claims. Even at small private schools, there are not more than a few kids born between September-April who are held back/“redshirted. generally only June-August bday kids and rarely April-May birthday kids are redshirted, meaning the largest possible age gap would be 16 months and even that would be a very rare April redshirt. Most redshirted are still only 11-13 months older than the summer bday kids who go on time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A quarter of the girls will be 10 by Christmas of 3rd grade? I have trouble believing that.
My kid goes to an all boys private with a huge amount of redshirting and reclassing, and the rates aren't near that high.
No, a quarter of the girls will be turning 10 between Christmas and February. And yes, I agree that it is unusual. But this is a group that also absorbed a decent amount of 2019-20 kindergarten repeats from public schools (they missed 3 months of kindergarten, essentially) and a few other complicated situations.
So 25% of her classmates were held back, not for 1 year, but for 2 years? Sounds like you need to switch schools.
This was probably due to the pandemic given OP’s kid’s age, and it’s going to be the case at most schools.
Um…no. I have a kid who just finished 2nd so same grade as OP’s kid (pandemic led to schools closed at end of 4k preschool and virtual school for kindergarten) no one was held back 2 years. The oldest kid in my kid’s class turned 9 in May of 2nd grade (so her bday is May 2014). Not sure I really believe OP that some kids are 22 months older than hers and in the same grade. So she’s saying there’s a September 2013 born kid and a July 2015 born kid in the same grade? No way unless the older kid has severe learning disorder or health issues. Certainly not 25% of girls in the grade are that much older.
at some weird private school, who the hell knows what they allow. they may very well allow a kindy-redshirted kid to be held back in later grades. absolute madness, but a private school can do what it wants for the most part.