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Posted Thursday, September 03, 2009 8:07 AM

Should Children Redshirt Kindergarten?

Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman
Getty Images

Every September, the class of incoming American kindergartners is ever slightly older.

In the U.S., kids who start kindergarten must be at least 5 years old. In theory, that seems like a clear-cut, easy enough rule─like the "You must be this tall to go on this ride" sign at an amusement park. But what’s driving the trend toward an older kindergarten class is the increasing number of 6-year-old “redshirted” kids whose parents have delayed their entry.

In 1980, about 10 percent of kindergartners were redshirted. Since then, the proportion has doubled.

It seems that fewer parents are comfortable with their child being one of the youngest in the class, the runts of the litter. By simply holding them back, parents can ensure their child begins the rat race as one of the oldest, most mature kids in class.

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It’s not surprising that the older kindergartners, on average, are slightly better students when they begin school. The real question is, does that initial age advantage last, or does it quickly peter out?

Until now, the research everyone looked to was by UC Santa Barbara’s Kathy Bedard and Elizabeth Dhuey. Bedard and Dhuey gathered achievement data in the U.S. and Europe, comparing the youngest kids in class with those months older. In fourth grade, the older kids were still performing a few percentage points better. In eighth grade, the advantage persisted; depending on the method of calculation, the oldest kids in eighth grade in the U.S. were ranking 4 to 8 percent higher than the youngest children in that grade.

The Bedard study became exhibit A for parents considering redshirting─even more so after Elizabeth Weil addressed it a New York Times Magazine article and Malcolm Gladwell discussed it in Outliers. By their interpretation of the data, if you wanted your child to be seen by teachers as one of the best students in class, and eventually win entrance into the best high schools, redshirting was a logical option to ponder.

Now two recent studies may completely flip the redshirt argument on its head.

First, scholars from National Bureau of Economic Research─Kasey Buckley and Daniel M. Hungerman─recently looked at detailed data from the birth certificate of every single child born in the United States from 1989 to 2001.

Astonishingly, they discovered slight differences in the seasons of the year that poor women and wealthy women give birth. The scholars couldn’t answer exactly why this was the case. It could be the accidental effect of differing work and vacation schedules, so that more affluent mothers get pregnant over the Christmas holidays, while more poor women get pregnant in the late spring and summer. Or it could be a conscious decision─perhaps some well-educated moms are timing their births, either to ensure their child is older, or to avoid caring for a newborn in the hot summer. But the seasonal patterns were clear in every year of the data.

So it turns out those fourth and eighth graders aren’t doing better just because they’re a few months older. They’re doing better because more of them are born to mothers who are affluent, college-educated, married, and white.

Combined, the seasonal birth pattern explains at least half the achievement gap between the oldest and youngest kids in class. That 4-point advantage is more like a 2-point advantage.

Second, a soon-to-be-published study by Todd Elder and Darren H. Lubotsky has debunked the theory of why older kids do better. It used to be argued that older kindergartners can soak up more from their teachers, learning at a faster rate. Each school year, this tiny advantage compounds. Like the NBER team, Elder and Lubotsky found the driving variable wasn’t how old the kids were, but how prepared the kids were by their preschool, day care, and home environment. The better-prepared kids learned more.

Elder and Lubotsky couldn't find any merit in redshirting─waiting a year to educate a child. Because what is more of an enriching intellectual experience for a child than going to school? “Our estimates clearly indicate that children’s reading and math abilities increase much more quickly once they begin kindergarten than they would have increased during the same time period if they delayed kindergarten entry,” the scholars wrote.

So that’s the choice parents face: is a 2-point statistical advantage worth having a child sit on the sidelines of learning for a whole year?

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Member Comments

Posted By: GotRocks (December 31, 2009 at 1:26 PM)

I taught my oldest kid to read at age 3.5 (Phonics, of course), and by age 9 he was reading faster than me (and I am a decent reader).  Spelling came very easy too.  Did the same thing in math and got him 6 years ahead of his age by the time he was 10 (no calculators, of course).

I guess that I'm lucky that I did NOT read the red-shirting articles, or for that matter, anything that's been 'discovered' about education since about 1950.


Posted By: Heide (December 30, 2009 at 4:56 AM)

As an Early Childhood Specialist and current tutor for kindergarteners I have some concern about the whole topic of "red-shirting."  I feel that just using a term meant for collegiate use, offensive and part of the problem.  Kindergarten was once a place for children to learn peer socialization and how to work groups. Now that many children have  First  and sometimes Second grade work thrust at them more children need tutoring just to stay in the race. If schools weren't pushing higher level skills, ie., penmanship and grammar on five year olds there wouldn't be a need to keep kids back another year.  I work privately in a school district that give letter grades on penmanship for kindergarten. I'm sorry but they just don't have the fine motor maturity for writing. First graders are required to alphabetize to the second letter. All K's have homework for the month and for the week, plus reading. We are having children performing cognitive activities that they are not expected to perform until much older.  So for parents that want their children to enjoy another year of childhood I say"Go for it!"


Posted By: msherfin (December 16, 2009 at 10:33 PM)

As an early childhood educator, I have been following stories about redshirting in the media for years. It's such a popular topic. I wonder, Po & Ashley, and anyone else who would like to comment, how influential is popular media in the decision to redshirt? Does the media itself create roles for parents of young children in their portrayals of the issue? And why and how does the media (so often it seems) go about portraying kindergarten "readiness" as a problem?