The issue, I think, is balance. You want your child to develop the ability to think and to problem-solve, to engage in the arts and sport as well, but also in activities which enrich their lives, or give them perspective.
At the moment, Finn's biggest concern is how quickly he can eat his lunch so he can get into the playground to play dinosaurs. It's the big issues with Finn right now.
But when I talk to parents of some of the older primary school children, they talk about the crush that's coming. The exams, the tears, the pressure. Who applies that pressure? Is it parents? Is it the school? Is it the curriculum? Is our curriculum too narrow? Are we too focused on academic achievement? I don't know what the answers are to those questions, but I may have a better idea in a couple of years.
But I am worried about the so-called 'crush' that's coming. I don't remember feeling under pressure at primary school. The only time I think I felt stressed was on school sports day. Lining up to race. That was about the only time I can remember feeling nervous or uptight.
I'm not sure what's changed since then, but there does seem to have been quite a shift - and, as the good childhood report has found in the uk - I wonder whether we are demanding too much from our children, too young.