Postby asdfghjjkl » Thu May 08, 2014 9:03 pm
I'm not so sure you have any options in this country, unless maybe the privates allow it. I'm fairly certain the states do not.
My oldest daughter is 31 August, so she has always been THE youngest. She started school in the States, and even though it was common there to delay, we felt she was ready (mind you, that was 1/2 day kindergarten at age 5).
We moved here when she was in YR4/3rd grade, and she has always been fine. However, many times we have had to help her realise there are reasons she always hovered around the middle, as many children had a full developmental year on her. Now that she is in year 9, the developmental variances are levelling out and she is pulling ahead.
If you already feel worried about readiness, then you should be. They start hard core on reading and writing VERY early here, and target expectations based on performance early on. There is no room for all the developmental variance that exists in ability until ages 8/9, and the kids feel their rankings very poignantly amongst their peers. It's kind of like expecting all babies to walk at 10 months, just cause some can.
Not sure what to advise, it is a tough system for summer babies here. Tough on late bloomers.
Beyond that, my youngest, who academically was sound and a winter baby, was EXHAUSTED through year 1. She always fell asleep as soon as she got home. Mind you, year 1 is the same as kindergarten, where in the States would only be 1/2 day, and many other European countries wouldn't even be in full-time school yet. It can be tough, they are so little.
Sorry to not be more positive. Good luck.