princessmom29
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2008
- Messages
- 8,520
What strikes me the most regarding this conversation is the insistence of what's right for "my child." He/she (usually he) will be one of the older students, one of the best performers, etc. This decision impacts all the other children who aren't held back as well. Don't we have responsibility to the broader community when making these decisions?
When your high school freshman is getting a drivers license and driving my 13-14 year old child around I start having concerns. When your 16 year old freshman is playing sports with my smaller 13-14 year old child I have concerns. When your likely more mature, developed child is competing with mine for grades and to get into college, I have serious issues.
If your child is not ready for school . . . seriously not ready then by all means hold them back. My concerns are not worth the years of problems that child is going to have and in fact are invalidated. But, if it's to give your child an "edge," to ensure that they are at the top of the class at the expense of all the other children who are entering that school year then I find it to be selfish.
Finally, to the extra year of childhood argument, the fact is that we all grow up. We all take on responsibilities and many kids can stand to take them on earlier than they already do.
I think this is part of what i was trying to get at and just couldn't quite say it in the right way. Your are absolutely right. It is not fair for a just turned 5 to have to compete aginst an about to be 7. The socially responsible thing to do is to give all kids a level playing feild. Our system does a rediness evaluation for this purpose. They track students who are "not ready" into the proper remediation and get them caught up. I think that this issue is not going to be fixed untill cutoffs are no longer a suggestion.