I was going to not post off topic, but that restraint is too difficult! [img]tongue.gif[/img] Sometimes I think it would be nice if there were less posts on this board so I wouldn't spend as much time reading it. I am compulsive and have to read every post. (This is totally my own problem, so no one else worry about what you're posting! Ironically, I think people shouldn't really complain about what's being posted because they could just not read it if they don't like it.) But I have learned so much from this board! I was able to talk about foreign adoptions in psychology class. I knew nothing about them until they got talked about here. And by the time I have a kid, I think I'll know as much about parenting as if it were my second child. [img]tongue.gif[/img] So, on to the topic:
<font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">You can drink at 18 in Ohio? That is so cool, I know a lot of people who would love to move there. (I'm a college student.)Quote:
Originally posted by dianasmama:
And, he'll be legally of drinking age at age 18 when he enters his Senior year too.
Personally I think all these arguments about age spans are better fit to impliment changes in legal ages for driving and such than for school ages. I think people mature at different levels and ideally we'd be put into school and everything else by that. But I'm not sure we even have the capabilities today to spot these differences and place children accordingly. I like to think someday we will.
As for ages, I started preschool at 2 because I really wanted to go. My mom gave in. [img]tongue.gif[/img] So I went to two years of preschool and started kindergarten at 4. But then I was held back in kindergarten so I ended up on track with my classmates, though I was one of the older kids in my class. Also, I never attended a public school until college, so I dunno how that would have influenced me.
Question: are children required to go to kindergarten? I was thinking only 1st grade is legally required, but I could be wrong. Are there certain schooling laws that are federal or are all schooling laws decided by states and districts? No need to know this besides I'm just curious.