
Originally Posted by
alpinevibes
My twins were born on 8/29 and are two days before the cutoff for our school. This whole debate has been a big topic for the last year but especially now as we have to decide if they're going to move on to Kindergarten with their current, predominantly older cohort (where they are 5mo younger than the next youngest kid) or stay back for another year of PreK. We've been pretty firmly in the "hold" camp but their teachers feel they're academically ready to move on, so that adds to the dilemma. I'm not really concerned about their academic prep at this point, nor do I care about their athletic advantage, but I want them to be the most adjusted, emotionally ready and socially capable as they move forward later in their school career. I don't want to send them on, only to have one or both needing to repeat a year past PreK and I'm honestly pretty into having my kids around home for an "extra" year.
That said, I work at a school [where they attend] and see both sides of the argument and the resounding feedback from talking to dozens of parents who've been in this position, as well as teachers and support teachers is to have them wait. As our friend, a 2nd grade teacher, said: we never see kids and say "wow, he's really overly prepared for 2nd grade, but we regularly see kids who just weren't ready to move forward."
This totally makes sense to me. I don't have a problem with folks redshirting their kids when they start kindergarten, meaning they decide at that point what trajectory their kid will take, either be old for their year or be on the young end. The thing I found odd/insane was holding a kid back for athletic reasons in 6th grade.
Some of the sports here are age based and some are academic year based. AAU hoops is age based and you can play up, etc. That said, the "select" school affiliated basketball teams typically are academic year based and you run into teams with kids that are 1-2 years older than what is typical for the academic year. There was a 13 year old 5th grader my son's team faced that was an absolute beast on the court. Tall at over 6 feet, fast, and absolutely impossible for the kids sometimes a foot shorter to deal with. Someone else said this, but I don't see how this pans out well for that specific kid in that specific example. There's also weirdness when it comes to baseball age...so it's age based but it revolves around a May 1 date. This means for a 12U team you could have a younger 7th graders on a predominantly 6th grade team. Those situations are odd to me, intentionally having your kid play back a year with kids an academic year younger, all knowing that come high school the kid will have to compete with their academic year cohort. That seems like a recipe for failure in that case. Meaning, you have an 8th grader play down on the 13u baseball team. The following year the same kid is trying out with his 9th grade classmates for the high school team(s). As someone else stated, extremely unlikely any of these kids are going to go pro at any sport so it seems a little nutty to me.
Last edited by Adolf Allerbush; 01-30-2024 at 06:06 PM.
Damn shame, throwing away a perfectly good white boy like that
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