I haven't been here in a while because we moved to GA in the summer, but I read this article and remembered that many of you were discussing the issue of redshirting on a previous post
https://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/25/opinion/sunday/dont-delay-your-kindergartners-start.html
Re: Article about red-shirting in the NYTimes
Interesting article, since there are so many these days holding their kids back a year.
My son will be one of the youngest when he goes to K because he has a July birthday but I definitely have no problems sending him when it's time. He is already bored at MDO because he knows everything they are learning in class and some of it he has known for over a year.
They are learning a letter a week at school and the second week of school, he was upset on a Thursday that they didn't go to the letter C, since they had learned the letter B on Tuesday. We had to tell him that they would only change letters once a week and he seems ok with it right now, although he was asking if they could start the number 3 since they have been on 1 and 2 for a month now.
We are moving at the end of the week so the last few weeks have been hectic but once we move I will probably start working more with him on numbers (he can only successfully count to 11..he makes stuff up after that, even though he can recognize most of the number between 11 and 20) and probably beginning to prepare him to learn to read.
Thank you for this great article. My summer birthday girl is in her 6th week of kinder and has settled in nicely.
I have to say that entering public school was a much bigger leap than I'd anticipated, for all of us. The need for independence and the expectations are much greater than they were in preschool. It took a good 2 weeks for the dust to settle and for her to figure out how to behave in the classroom. I can see that she'll be successful in her new environment, thank goodness, but OH! What a difference from preschool!
My favorite quote from the article: "Learning is maximized not by getting all the answers right, but by making errors and correcting them quickly. In this respect, children benefit from being close to the limits of their ability."