28 answers

Seperating Twins in School- One Grade Higher than the Other

I have twin 4 yr olds- B/G...also a daughter 6 yrs old. My girl twin is VERY smart..she can read most of what her big sister- 2 yrs her elder reads in her Kindergarten class. We are considering putting her into Kind next yr ( a yr early)- I am hesitant for fear this will send the "you aren't as smart as your sister" message to her twin brother ( same school) I don't want to hold her back from being challenged & excelling & being all she can be- however- I don't want to end up with a self-fulfilling prophecy with my boy who may not try b/c "he's the dumb one" ( his thoughts possibly- not ours) or him hearing his entire academic life "your twin sister is a grade ahead of you!!"I'd love to hear from moms who have done this & what the oputcome was please

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I am a twin myself and very upset about this question! Keeping them together is a much better choice period! Twins compete with each other weather you like it or not so having one graduate before the other is major problems. Just being honest. My parents thought about with us when we were in 6th grade and I begged my parents to let us stay together. They allowed it and we were much happier. Twins have a bond no one else can understand in some ways it is like the brain is shared. This is why we did better staying and learning in the same grade. We helped each other through all of school. Ps we also graduated when we were 17 I don't think that was a major issue at all. Nut shell leave them in the same grade unless you want major problems.

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I would not do it. (my twin brother would have loved it if I would have been a grade lower or higher but I would have not.) just my thoughts on it.
Good luck.

First when is their bdays? Boys are always a year behind at first. I would talk to the schools counsler, they can tell you what options you can do.

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I am a twin myself and very upset about this question! Keeping them together is a much better choice period! Twins compete with each other weather you like it or not so having one graduate before the other is major problems. Just being honest. My parents thought about with us when we were in 6th grade and I begged my parents to let us stay together. They allowed it and we were much happier. Twins have a bond no one else can understand in some ways it is like the brain is shared. This is why we did better staying and learning in the same grade. We helped each other through all of school. Ps we also graduated when we were 17 I don't think that was a major issue at all. Nut shell leave them in the same grade unless you want major problems.

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I would hesitate to move her faster, not only because what it will say to her brother, but also, remember that she will always be young for her class. Even if she is brilliant and can do the academic work, she will be physically and emotionally behind her classmates. This can really cause problems down the road, especially in adolescence. I was a promoted in grade school and went to an ivy-league college at the age of 17 so you could say I was a success but trust me, high school was brutal, even for a smart girl. I am going to "red shirt" (i.e., hold back or late-start) all my girls (they have spring/summer birthdays) to make sure they are at the older end of the age range as a result of my personal experience. It has nothing to do with their capabilities (they are, of course, super-geniuses :-) LOL)

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When they are little they won't even think about it that way. But maybe as they get older and tease each other it might be thrown in there. I know in my son's public school they won't let you start kinder unless you are 5 by Aug. regardless of the previous education they have had. Also be careful about putting her in to soon socially. She has to be mature enough or it could cause problems for her. (although girls seem to mature faster than boys)

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I do not have experience with this, but are the kids in preschool now? If not, I would definitely do that first, with both of them. Girls do mature faster and are more easily transitioned early into school, but she also needs to have the non-academic skills down like listening and follwing directions, getting in line, sitting still, etc. Since she's so bright, I'm sure she wouldn't or doesn't have a problem with that, but it is something to consider. Also, something we used to tell parents at my school (I used to teach) when they considered putting their daughters into school early was this... Do you want your daughter to be learning and talking about sex one year earlier with older boys? I know that sounds silly...and it sounds so far off, but it truly is something to consider! I am not a mother of twins, so I can't really say how I would feel, but I don't think I would recommend it! Good luck, though, it is a tough decision!

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My husband is a twin and he is very adamant that you should not seperate twins in school until they are ready (or start to naturally, with class changes in middle school). Last year his cousin's wife bowed to the school's decision to split the kids up for their own good, and it has been horrible. They're both now extremely rebellious with respect to being seperated, and have been told they should be on mood-altering drugs for hyperactivity, add, etc, when there were no problems before they seperated them for 1st grade. I'm not sure how it might affect boy/girl twins, or being in seperate grades instead of just seperate classrooms....

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Montessori! the classes are mixed age, 3-6 year olds for Children's House (or preschool & kindergarten as we call it here), and each child has their own work. PLEASE steer away from any "gifted" or "remedial" classifications, as this can be such a stigma &/or pressure forevermore......In a Montessori classroom each child works at their own level, and the older children mentor the younger ones. When done right, there is a great sense of both commraderie among the children, and sense of pride in each child's own abilities. They'll discover likes for subjects you'd never even guess.... one of my boys absolutely LOVES geography, who would've known? I have two boys that have both thrived in this environment, while they are very different in their strengths. Instead of comparing themselves to each other apples to apples, they seek each other's help in the other's strong subjects, and neither thinks they are "dumb" or "smart", just that they have a greater interest in this or that at this time in life.

Good luck! it's obvious you care very much for your children and their successful education.

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You could have them both in the same grade... but, if the girl twin is able to... she could be in the gifted & talented classes too. Which is what many schools have.
And if advanced in just reading... then that alone may not warrant her jumping ahead in grade level. (my friend's son is like that... real "smart" & advanced in reading... but he started Kinder at 5).
It really depends on what the Teacher says as well... and then there is emotional maturity & aptitude as well, which can affect/determine if a child is indeed ready for a grade level already or not.
Ultimately... it is a child's emotional maturity... that determines if they adapt and are happy and adjusted in school and with peer problems. Not just their brain aptitude.

All the best,
Susan

1 mom found this helpful

I'm in a similar predicament with boy/boy twins. I kept my both my twins in a good daycare/preschool an extra year, because one was not ready to start pre-K in the public school at 4 y.o., but the other boy could have without a problem. I made the choice that I did because I knew the teachers at their preschool could (& did) supplement the advanced twin, so he didn't really miss out, while the other boy really needed another year of being a little kid, before getting into the more formal educational system. I don't regret holding the brighter one back at this point, since he got more one on one interaction at the pre-school than he would have at the pre-K with a much greater student/teacher ratio. For example, at the preschool, they were sending my bright twin into the lower age group classrooms as a teacher helper part of the day, and that was really was benefical for his maturity level in particular to help "tutor" the little kids. He was academically ready for K, but he really benefited from an extra year to "grow-up' just as much as his brother who wasn't ready to start at 4. Girls already mature faster than boys do so you might not gain as much maturity advantage as I did. If you have a good quality pre-school or start home schooling her though, I doubt she will be held back or lack being challenged-kids are primed to learn at that age. If anything I found my bright kid was MORE bored and less challenged in K this year then in his preschool, since the curriculum is more structured.

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