T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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790.1 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Apr 30 1992 10:14 | 3 |
| Art,
Perhaps the hovercraft is full of eels.....
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790.2 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | festina lente - hasten slowly | Thu Apr 30 1992 10:46 | 32 |
|
I think it's an incorrect assumption that they may fail. Clientele
arrive through several methods.
1. personal referral - if they've done babysitting in the past, or
done any kind of after school programs, this should be in place.
2. advertising - they should advertise an open-house and do a mailing
to parents of children who are the age they will be doing daycare for.
Professionalism is a must - if these people have any accredited
programs for child education or development, that's a definite plus.
Unfortunately, an assumption may exist in some people's minds that
women are better nurturers than men. I think they may need to buck
this stereotype. The result may be their business grows more slowly,
but as people grow accustomed to the concept, they may find they have a
very vocal and loyal clientele.
My mother ran a daycare center for 14 years, and truth be told daycare
centers are going out of business over the past few years since mroe
people are doing childcare in the home, and more people are unemployed
and have time to care for their own children rather than sending them
to daycare. This has damaged the industry. A new daycare center may
find the climate for new clientele to be extremely poor.
But advertising, open houses, sponsoring after-school connections with
local schools, and spreading the word through the parents of their
community, will probably help.
-Jody
|
790.3 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Apr 30 1992 11:05 | 5 |
| I think the base not is alluding to the preconceived reputation that men
are child molesting, rapist, who stock the darken alleys waiting for
child or woman to pass to satisfy their sexual lustful desires.
Funny, I have had no urges. How about the author of .0?
|
790.4 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Apr 30 1992 11:14 | 4 |
| They will fail because they will not be able to afford any liability
insurance.
Mike
|
790.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Apr 30 1992 11:22 | 14 |
| I recently read a letter to one of the advice columnists from a man who had
undertaken a great deal of training in order to become a "nanny"; this man
loved to work with children and thought this would be an ideal occupation
for him. However, nobody would hire him. The usual reaction was "We want
a woman."
I don't see a solution to this problem. Men, collectively, will likely
never be viewed as positively as women for the role of nurturing children.
It of course doesn't help when there are numerous celebrated cases of male
child-care owners being prosecuted for sexual molestation of their charges.
(That there are also women who engage in such crimes is rarely front-page
news.)
Steve
|
790.6 | | TRCOA::QUIROGA | | Thu Apr 30 1992 11:42 | 15 |
|
Re: .1 and .3
I think you are reading between the lines, much too many things that I
did not write.
The article I read about this MR. MOM day care center suggested that it
may fail. I did not say that I thought it was doomed. I was merely
writing here what I read in the article (or what I can remember).
Tell me, do you always see in people such dark motives?. Because, if
you had asked me before, I could have told you that I was not alluding
to any of the stuff you mentioned in .3
Art.
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790.7 | | TRCOA::QUIROGA | | Thu Apr 30 1992 11:50 | 13 |
|
Re .2
I am sorry if my base note sounded as if I was assuming that this
particular business was doomed.
I agree that this particular assumption is wrong.
I guess I was just asking why somebody who wrote an article like this
would assume that.
Art.
|
790.8 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Apr 30 1992 11:57 | 9 |
| I also think that the name of the business, "Mr. Mom", is in itself an
invitation to failure. It implies that men are just a substitute for a
"real" mother, and if anyone saw the Michael Keaton movie of the same name,
their prejudices would be reinforced.
I wish the proprietors the best of luck, but I would be willing to bet that
they will be staring at empty rooms for a long time.
Steve
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790.9 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Apr 30 1992 12:31 | 6 |
| First, I am opolgising to Art. But as I re-read the note of .3 perhaps
I didn't make myself too clear. I was trying to say that I am sure that
Art doesn't hang out in dark alleys. Nor do I to satisfy those evil
desires. But I am sure that these things might be in the hearts and
minds of the public at large in lew of things that have happened at
daycare centers like,'Little Rascles' and such.
|
790.10 | | TRCOA::QUIROGA | | Thu Apr 30 1992 13:23 | 9 |
|
Re: .9
Hi there,
Thanks for your clarification. I agree with you.
Art.
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790.11 | | BILLEM::INGALLS | | Thu Apr 30 1992 14:34 | 13 |
| There you go again George, generalizing.
All the base note said was that this daycare center was completely run
by men and asked for input about it's chances for success/failure.
Where DO you come up with these awful notions?
FYI George - As far as I know men DO NOT have a "preconceived
reputation" for being child molesting, rapists hiding in wait
for an innocent woman or child to pass by.
|
790.12 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | no guru, no method, no teacher | Thu Apr 30 1992 14:35 | 13 |
| re .3, no urges at all? :-) (You said "I have had no urges" but I
assume you mean no urges to lurk in dark alleys and attack unsuspecting
women and children. However, I'd feel sorry for you if you've had no
urges at all!)
I agree that the business (Mr. Mom) may fail because of preconceived
ideas that the only reason men would want to take care of children is
so they could abuse them in some way. Society still seems to consider
mothers as the primary caregivers. If the guys are sincere, it's too
bad this is the case.
Lorna
|
790.13 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Apr 30 1992 14:35 | 2 |
| Perhaps you havent been reading much of these notes there Gail....:)
Or sleeping or something of such..... :)
|
790.14 | don't call me Mr.Mom please!! | YOSMTE::SCARBERRY_CI | | Thu Apr 30 1992 16:39 | 15 |
| I agree with the note about the misconception that men would only want
to care for children for some wierd or lewd reason. It's the
sensastional cases, the small percent of the criminal, that we subject
the many.
Take a peek in the Parenting notesfile, and you will find that quite a
few parents were suspicious of teenage boy babysitters. Why?
Perhaps, these fellows could appeal to single parents that wanted male
role models or male interaction with their sons or children (for those
folks with inhibitions). I would imagine that word of mouth would
follow on the conduct or performance of the daycare center and thus
business would either pick up or decrease based on those references.
cindy
|
790.15 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | festina lente - hasten slowly | Thu Apr 30 1992 18:02 | 14 |
|
I'm with .14
In fact, they could draw a tremendous amount of support from people who
know that men are capable of nurturing and loving children - single
fathers with either partial or full custody (or as pointed out in .14
perhaps single mothers looking for a positive male influence for their
children would see it as a particularly good win also.)
Tapping into local support groups for single fathers, or anything of
that sort, might give them a primo customer base.
-Jody
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790.16 | | TIMBER::DENISE | M disgusted over unNhibited cows | Fri May 01 1992 11:22 | 7 |
|
isn't that the premise of new businesses anyways?
find an open market (service demand) and meet that
need.
i think the points made by .14 & .15 are viable options
that need to be considered.
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790.17 | Question... | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri May 01 1992 11:35 | 4 |
| Question: Other than age difference, what would be the difference
between Mr. MOM Daycare and, say, Summer Camp?
Don (ex Camp counselor)
|
790.18 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri May 01 1992 11:40 | 7 |
|
.17 Association and preconceived reputations. Such as incidents that
Little Rascals and other day cares have given and that, so far to date,
Summer Camps haven't gone to court in regards to a child molesting
rap(s).
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790.19 | | TIMBER::DENISE | M disgusted over unNhibited cows | Fri May 01 1992 12:24 | 11 |
|
i think in order to run a day care operation would require
more attention. they are dealing with children that are
practically dependent on their source of food, diaper
change and all round attention.
in a summer camp the children are prone to socializing amongst
themselves, exploring and they're pretty much more independent from
their younger counterparts. i'm not saying they need less
supervision, but its a different kind than with babies.
would be in
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790.20 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri May 01 1992 12:33 | 2 |
| Another issue is that children are much older in summer camps and the
act of unwanted sex is lessened by age.
|
790.21 | ;-) | TIMBER::DENISE | M disgusted over unNhibited cows | Fri May 01 1992 15:06 | 7 |
|
COLD SHOWER TIME, ::RAUH....
that makes definitely more than 2 replies you put in dealing with
sex....
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790.22 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri May 01 1992 15:47 | 6 |
| Denise,
Yuck Yuck..... The base note was looking for an answer why. And why
was the reasons that you have pointed out.
|
790.23 | come on, you can admit it. we're almost family ;) | TIMBER::DENISE | M disgusted over unNhibited cows | Fri May 01 1992 16:52 | 8 |
|
what truly surprises me is that you manage to connect it to sex,
::RAUH.
i suppose if we discussed soap or something...there would be the
ultimate connection for you as well, right?
even when a lawyer `screws' an oponent's client there is still
that sexual connection, isn't there???
|
790.24 | i don't understand "::RAUH-SPEAK" | DEMON::INGALLS | | Fri May 01 1992 16:54 | 9 |
| re .20
>>the act of unwanted sex is lessened by age?
please explain? (i question this because rape is "unwanted sex" and
women of all ages have been raped.)
i don't think age has anything to do with this.
|
790.25 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Fri May 01 1992 18:10 | 22 |
| I _think_ the age thing means that there is a general perception that
very young children (day-care age) are more likely to be preyed upon
because perpetrators think the kids will be too ignorant and/or too
scared to tell anyone. [Especially the ones too young to talk. Erk.]
I have no idea whether the incidence of the sexual abuse of children
drops for older children - I'd be inclined to think not. But I doubt
it'd be a useful technique for the Mr. Mom people to try and convince
parents that their toddlers are safer in daycare than their
10-year-olds are in the Boy Scouts or on the team bus or in the locker
room or...
Anyway, I can see why some people would be leery of an all-male
day-care arrangement; it isn't the sort of thing one expects men to
want to do, therefore they either can't be very good at it or they're
perverted. [Much the same logic was used, I believe, when women first
wanted to become nurses in the battlefield - "They couldn't possibly
cope with the rigors of wartime injuries, and besides, what decent
woman wants to take intimate personal care of a total stranger? There
must be something wrong with them!"]
-b
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790.26 | Best of luck to them | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat May 02 1992 04:34 | 13 |
| I agree with .25 that while most people don't find another person
sexually interesting until *both* of them have at least got close to
puberty, it is not a good marketing ploy to even mention sexual abuse.
For myself, I would enjoy it as a job. People are fairly boring
before the age of about 4 months - you put food in at one end and it comes
out the other, but after that they are interesting, and I would imagine
that those less than 4 months would be a minority.
And before you ask, with three kids of my own and four nephews and
nieces I can cope with everything except the breast-feeding.
Dave
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790.27 | | TRCOA::QUIROGA | | Sat May 02 1992 19:23 | 19 |
|
Re: .26
Dave,
I can see how you are qualified to take care of little ones.
Now, a man with no children of his own, is he qualified to take care of
children?.
I make the question because it seems to me that woman are given the
benefit of the doubt, when they do not have children of their own, and
are part of a day care center environment. But it seems that is not
true with men.
I am not trying to judge anybody, I am just trying to learn about
other people's perception.
Art.
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790.28 | | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Mon May 04 1992 12:20 | 19 |
| re.27
A man with no children of his own can certainly be qualified to take
care of children.
My ex-brother-in-law --father of none, older brother to 11-- had more
child-care experience by the time he was 20 than most people get in a
life-time. OK, so he's an extreme case; but he's illustrative
nonetheless.
Men can learn how to care for children. I imagine the learning process
is much like what women experience. Learn by doing, once you have the
will.
Annie
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790.29 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue May 05 1992 10:10 | 16 |
| A minor child will have enough knowledge of saying no to older siblings
or to adult molester.
I am certainly surprised by the double talk that goes on in this file.
First we are castrated by the wymin because we are oppressing men who
rape, loot, and pilferage. Now when we make comments to support,
castrated again!
In the immortal words of Chris Loid <Doc Brown in Back to the future>
'Now that I have concord time travel, I am going to decade my life to
the oldest mystery of all!"
Fox: 'Whats that Doc?"
Doc: 'Women!'
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790.30 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | it ain't easy; being green | Tue May 05 1992 10:23 | 9 |
| re 790.25
<I have no idea whether the incidence of the sexual abuse of children
<drops for older children ...
some info in 789.82
herb
|
790.31 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue May 05 1992 10:42 | 3 |
| .24
O.K. who woke up Gail again?? She was doing fine sleeping, now she
is awake......:)
|