Mickey Fliers
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2004
- Messages
- 4,872
It all varies on when the cut-off is as you can see, different states have different ones but the May babies come into play as the youngest when all the June, July, August babies have been held back for our Sept. 1 cut-off.
So, your May baby turns 5 in May with the Sept. 1 cut-off but then the June-August babies are held back. As you are sending your 5 year old May baby in on time, the summer babies that were held back are now a year older than your child (turning 6 before school starts), where as yours just turned 5 a few months earlier. Hence, now you have the May babies being the youngest with being basically a year younger and so the cycle goes.
I guess that is what I mean. Where does all of this nonsense end? In the quest to hold kids back just so "they aren't the youngest", I think we are doing a disservice to the kids. The cut-offs are there for a reason and pretty soon, we are going to have kids starting college at 20! (assuming they go right after high school

I guess I just wish parents would pay attention to what THEIR child needs, instead of what all the neighborhood parents are doing. I would never consider keeping a June or July bday child back unless there were developmental delays. When we were kids, kindergarten was for 5 year olds, whether they were 5.5 or just turned 5 on the first day of school. Has the curriculum changed so much in the last 25 years?