Anonymous wrote:Just don’t be overly weird about your kid being young for grade, like a lot of DCUM posters are, and to be frank, you sound like you are heading towards. It’s just not that big a deal. Don’t brag about your kid being the youngest. Don’t teach them that it makes them somehow special. Don’t be invested in your kid’s identity as the youngest. Don’t drop their birthday into as many total unrelated conversations as you can, especially when they are standing right next to you. Don’t make a big deal about how much older some of their classmates are. Just please, if you possibly can, please be normal and not supremely weird about age.
Signed,
The youngest in the class
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Multiple kids is not the same as a experience with classrooms fulls of kids.
Sure. My sister the experienced teacher says the same thing, though. And she has many years of teaching experience.
Doubt it.
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You are so desperate it’s sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Multiple kids is not the same as a experience with classrooms fulls of kids.
Sure. My sister the experienced teacher says the same thing, though. And she has many years of teaching experience.
Doubt it.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 5th grade daughter with a late August bday that we sent on time. I regret it for the social aspects. She's fine academically. I hit puberty at age 11 (young), but my husband's sisters were much later.... My kid looks like a little girl compared to her peers. It's socially awkward. This won't hit boys until 7th/8th grade or later, but it's something to consider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Multiple kids is not the same as a experience with classrooms fulls of kids.
Sure. My sister the experienced teacher says the same thing, though. And she has many years of teaching experience.
Anonymous wrote:Multiple kids is not the same as a experience with classrooms fulls of kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s the thing that bothers me… parents that red shirt always yammer on about “the gift of time” or “let them be little”. Or just automatically assume parents will redshirt a summer kid.
ALL of the problem kids in both kindergarten and 1st grade have been older kids. Yes, that’s completely anecdotal, in my experience it’s never been the youngest kids causing problems in class.
It’s been my experience in the classroom as well.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s the thing that bothers me… parents that red shirt always yammer on about “the gift of time” or “let them be little”. Or just automatically assume parents will redshirt a summer kid.
ALL of the problem kids in both kindergarten and 1st grade have been older kids. Yes, that’s completely anecdotal, in my experience it’s never been the youngest kids causing problems in class.