loopymommy
May I never be too old for Disney.
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2008
- Messages
- 180
I was one of those kids who was skipped ahead. I went to Kindergarten early and skipped 6th grade. I ended up being a pre-pubescent 10-year old girl in a 7th grade NYC public junior high school where EVERYONE else in my grade was 12- to 13-years old. I turned 16 a week after my high school graduation and went away to college. Though my parents and the school administrators thought I appeared intellectually, physically, and emotionally mature enough to handle the experience (and my grades reflected such), I wasn't. I went on to earn a BFA and MA by the time I was 23, but the scars that one gets as an adolescent stay with you for life.
My son, on the other hand, has a late November birthday. We were given the option to enroll him early or to give him the "gift of another year." We chose the gift. He is one of the older boys in 7th grade, but eventually he will be one of the first with his driver's license and an after-school job. His grades are wonderful and he is more than capable of handling both the academic and social pressures he now faces in the transition from elementary school to junior high. The difference in maturity between the younger and older kids in his grade is strikingly obvious, especially during class parties and trips. The younger ones may be doing well academically, but I feel that in the long run, they suffer for their parents' decision. No amount of intellectual proficiency can replace the missed years of life experience.
My son, on the other hand, has a late November birthday. We were given the option to enroll him early or to give him the "gift of another year." We chose the gift. He is one of the older boys in 7th grade, but eventually he will be one of the first with his driver's license and an after-school job. His grades are wonderful and he is more than capable of handling both the academic and social pressures he now faces in the transition from elementary school to junior high. The difference in maturity between the younger and older kids in his grade is strikingly obvious, especially during class parties and trips. The younger ones may be doing well academically, but I feel that in the long run, they suffer for their parents' decision. No amount of intellectual proficiency can replace the missed years of life experience.

