http://www.slate.com/articles/double...dergarten.html
This topic is near and dear to my heart as it profoundly affects two of my kids. My daughter is August 20th and I was quasi-bullied into sending her to kindergarten right on time. I'm not kidding, her preschool teacher and the principal couldn't believe I would contemplate holding a gregarious, intellectually bright child even though I told them that she would not be eligible in many other places in which we had contemplated moving. This speech was delivered in one of those condescending, "Are you overenmeshed with your kid?" Ah, to go back in time and have a redo...but I digress.
Fast forward to 4th grade, DD tears it up academically and she is socially adjusted, Every now and then I think, "Yep she is young." This shows up sometimes when I observe her play sports or overhear topics that her peers talk about. She just isn't quite there. She is young but she tends to skew a bit young as well, if that makes any sense. It isn't a BFD, very subtle, but I do notice it. Although I have second guessed myself about this 5 million times, it really probably was the best decision for her. Or Maybe we made it the right decision, I don't know.
My youngest (4) has a May 29th birthday. He has been in speech for 2 years, is tiny (5th percentile for his age), and tends to hit developmental milestones on the late side (talking late, walking late, just now going through the control issues that my other kids went through at age three). He also can only focus for about 10 minutes and then he is done with anything remotely academic. I had a lot of peace about my plan to hold him until I saw this article. (DAMN YOU SLATE AND NEW YORK TIMES! ) We live in an affluent district where everyone holds. (I'm not kidding, February, March, April- many kids are held). There is a huge push for kids to be reading by the end of kinder. Kids are "flagged" for first grade if they are not. (Thank you, No Child Left Behind, Kindergarten is so much pressure now!)
My oldest child has an early winter birthday and he has far more older friends than younger. While I mostly still am at peace with holding my youngest, I *get* that sometimes not having the advantage of size or ability can create a better work ethic which so critical in life long success. My oldest just made both local travel lacrosse teams while several other local kids who actually have more natural athletic ability didn't make the team. Frankly, he has had to chip away and practice to make something of himself. He had to "go get it".
So, font of eternal iMSN wisdom, chip in. Talk about it at a macro and micro level. I'm especially interested in the educator's point of view. (Paging Sally, paging Sally, I know you are both an educator and your middle kid has a May 29th birthday and his relative youth hasn't always been an attribute.)
This topic is near and dear to my heart as it profoundly affects two of my kids. My daughter is August 20th and I was quasi-bullied into sending her to kindergarten right on time. I'm not kidding, her preschool teacher and the principal couldn't believe I would contemplate holding a gregarious, intellectually bright child even though I told them that she would not be eligible in many other places in which we had contemplated moving. This speech was delivered in one of those condescending, "Are you overenmeshed with your kid?" Ah, to go back in time and have a redo...but I digress.
Fast forward to 4th grade, DD tears it up academically and she is socially adjusted, Every now and then I think, "Yep she is young." This shows up sometimes when I observe her play sports or overhear topics that her peers talk about. She just isn't quite there. She is young but she tends to skew a bit young as well, if that makes any sense. It isn't a BFD, very subtle, but I do notice it. Although I have second guessed myself about this 5 million times, it really probably was the best decision for her. Or Maybe we made it the right decision, I don't know.
My youngest (4) has a May 29th birthday. He has been in speech for 2 years, is tiny (5th percentile for his age), and tends to hit developmental milestones on the late side (talking late, walking late, just now going through the control issues that my other kids went through at age three). He also can only focus for about 10 minutes and then he is done with anything remotely academic. I had a lot of peace about my plan to hold him until I saw this article. (DAMN YOU SLATE AND NEW YORK TIMES! ) We live in an affluent district where everyone holds. (I'm not kidding, February, March, April- many kids are held). There is a huge push for kids to be reading by the end of kinder. Kids are "flagged" for first grade if they are not. (Thank you, No Child Left Behind, Kindergarten is so much pressure now!)
My oldest child has an early winter birthday and he has far more older friends than younger. While I mostly still am at peace with holding my youngest, I *get* that sometimes not having the advantage of size or ability can create a better work ethic which so critical in life long success. My oldest just made both local travel lacrosse teams while several other local kids who actually have more natural athletic ability didn't make the team. Frankly, he has had to chip away and practice to make something of himself. He had to "go get it".
So, font of eternal iMSN wisdom, chip in. Talk about it at a macro and micro level. I'm especially interested in the educator's point of view. (Paging Sally, paging Sally, I know you are both an educator and your middle kid has a May 29th birthday and his relative youth hasn't always been an attribute.)
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