I just read another thread about K and sending kids or not - and issue i've read on here many, many times, and one I struggled with too.
Do any teachers know why school districts have such late cut off dates? We're in NY, and our cut off dates for all the schools around us is Nov 30 or Dec 1, and it's been that way since I was in school here (started K in 1973).
It seems the teachers struggle having the young ones in their class as much as the parents struggle w/ whether they should send them or not. I'd also think schools would have higher testing scores if all the kids were a tad older. Do the districts never ask for teacher input as to what the cut-off date should be? I'd think the teachers are the ones to know, way more than a school board official sitting in an office.
I have always just wondered why people at some point thought "let's send 4yo's to K"... wouldn't all you teachers love to have all your K students already be 5yo? I've read before "well, SOMEONE has to be the youngest"... but why not at least let them all be 5yo before they start? It's just always bothered me, and I thought maybe someone had some insight.
Do any teachers know why school districts have such late cut off dates? We're in NY, and our cut off dates for all the schools around us is Nov 30 or Dec 1, and it's been that way since I was in school here (started K in 1973).
It seems the teachers struggle having the young ones in their class as much as the parents struggle w/ whether they should send them or not. I'd also think schools would have higher testing scores if all the kids were a tad older. Do the districts never ask for teacher input as to what the cut-off date should be? I'd think the teachers are the ones to know, way more than a school board official sitting in an office.
I have always just wondered why people at some point thought "let's send 4yo's to K"... wouldn't all you teachers love to have all your K students already be 5yo? I've read before "well, SOMEONE has to be the youngest"... but why not at least let them all be 5yo before they start? It's just always bothered me, and I thought maybe someone had some insight.
and we live in NYC. The cut off date here is 12/31 and I don't know of anyone who has held their child back. If you make the cutoff you send the child (and it is almost impossible as a teacher to hold a student back in K). We have a great number of 4 year olds in K.
This was no problem when K was what it was supposed to be, readiness for school. Students used to play, socialize, nap and learn skills to get ready to read. Now of course K is more like first grade. There is no nap allowed, they use many workbooks, are expected to read, write and do math by mid-year. This is developmentally inappropriate for 4 and 5 year olds. So I think that many school districts have pushed cut off date to Aug, Sept so that they don't have 4 year olds to teach (and many parents hold back their children so they can meet the new demands of K). I think that if K was what it was meant to be we would have many more successful students in the later grades. Developmentally children are ready to read at about age 6 or 7. If we waited until then to teach reading most children would learn to read quickly without struggling. In other countries reading is not taught until the child is 7ish. We here in America feel the more we teach the more a child will learn. This is not true and just leads to more frustrated children who are being classified with learning problems.
for my students and my own children who are caught up in this push for academics at such a young age.
, Indiana does let you be more flexible than the city does. Where are you in Indiana? Still close to the city or no?