T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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122.1 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | WHO.....MADE.....YOU!!! | Tue May 19 1992 11:21 | 14 |
|
First of all, drop the child off and leave!! Don't hang around saying
a thousand goodbyes. IT makes it much worse for the kid. When my wife
babysat, there was this one mother who would keep saying "Goodbye, I'm
leaving" over and over until the kid finally noticed then started
crying. Must be some kinda security thing where mother's need to know
they're wanted or something!
Second, if the child is crying when you leave, it won't last. Every
kid my wife watched that would cry as the parent left was stopped and
playing with toys by the time the parent made it back to their car.
Chris D.
|
122.2 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Say you saw it in NOTES... | Tue May 19 1992 11:51 | 37 |
| My oldest went to daycare part-time (2 days) when he was a little over
three. He did NOT adjust well. He cried all day! He did not ever cry
when I left him off - he was being such a trooper or my sake. He was
fine in every other way in the evenings and weekends, but spent most of
the day crying at daycare. I pulled him after 6 days (three weeks). I
was temping and my husband was unemployed (soon to be employed again)
so we had another option short-term. Soon after, a friend said she
would be doing daycare at home - would I want to bring the boys. We
jumped on the chance - she knew the kids, they knew her, she was also
my oldest son's sunday school teacher. It was fine for a short period.
She started in early October and by December she was telling me that my
oldest was not adjusting well - he was being destructive to her things
(which she never told me about as it happened) and to the other kids.
At that time my husband changed his shift to accomodate him - he began
working nights. My job was full-time now (I started back because my
hudband's first offer fell thru and we needed the medical, etc). I
spent time talking with the pedi at the first sign of trouble back in
September - he told me to hang in there, my son would adjust. I
disagreed - I felt I knew my son better and I didn't want to make his
life miserable for him. Now in December, my kids went to Jeanne's
part-time - 2 hours a day. We bought a house in NH and moved away from
Jeanne (and she moved to Washington, so the arrangement was over). As
my son got older, he got better adjusted and accepted the way things
were. As long as he thought he was "visiting" for a few hours, he
could handle it. He is very much a family-man and didn't like being
away from his parents. Now he is a 7 year old in school - loves every
minute of it and begs to go on Saturdays! I feel the decisions we made
were right for our family - I am glad we did not listen to the pedi's
advice, but chose our own way.
You will need to make your own decisions because you know your child
best. You will receive lots of personal testimony here - which will be
a big help (unfortunately, I didn't know about notes back then).
Good luck with your decisions!!
-sandy
|
122.3 | | SELL3::MACFAWN | Training to be tall and blonde | Tue May 19 1992 13:48 | 32 |
| Funny you should mention Creative Years daycare. My husband, who used
to be Mr. Mom is going out into the working world soon. I called
Creative Years to find out how much they were, etc. They wanted
$100.00 for my 21 month old and $95.00 for my 4 year old! Why work if
it's going to cost that much! I know some places have a second child
discount, but not this place.
The lady at the daycare center said that the 2 yr olds have lunch at
11:30 and nap at 12:00, and the 4 year olds have lunch at 12:00 and nap
at 12:30 until 2:00. I asked "What if my child doesn't want to take a
nap? Is she going to have to stay in bed the whole time?" And the
answer was no. They take them out of the napping room and let them
play with quiet toys until 2:00. The price of the daycare includes
breakfast, lunch, and snacks but does not include diapers and wipes.
I'm still trying to find a daycare or home provider that will let my
children play outside if nice (my last provider wouldn't let them
outside if there was a breeze), teach them songs, games, etc., won't
punish them if they don't want to take a nap or eat all their lunch (my
last provider did this). So needless to say I've had rotten luck with
daycare. As soon as I am upset with the daycare provider, I remove my
child and get a new one.
My problem is that my 21 month old has been home with Daddy since she
was three months old. I have a feeling she's not going to like going
to someone else. Especially if I take them to a daycare where they
seperate the ages. I think she'll be fine as long as she can be with
her sister. Once seperated, who knows what will happen. I'll just
have to keep interviewing the sitters and find one I want my children
to stay with.
Gail
|
122.4 | My two cents ... | CALS::JENSEN | | Tue May 19 1992 15:03 | 61 |
|
Well ...
Jim/I flex-houred until Juli's first birthday. From 12-17 months she went
to a homecare provider (next door). That seemed to work out fairly well
(in the beginning) because Juli knew her and played with the care provider's
kids regularly. So we didn't experience ANY "severance anxiety".
With time, what we did experience was Juli's frustration (and consequently
behavior problems). Juli needed more challenge (arts/crafts, games),
more structure (schedules, naps, etc.) and really thrived by being with many
other kids. Jim usually does the daycare run (dropoff and pickup) and
Juli seems "rarely" to mind his leaving (often demands that he leave NOW!).
With me, she's more clingy. I allow a little extra time to play with her
and her friends at daycare and then "quietly bow out" (not sneak away, but
just take advantage of the moment to split while Juli's playing or enjoying
herself). She'll notice I've left and might call out my name, but rarely
cries or screams (I can hear her from the parking lot -- if she's outdoors).
The kids are "encouraged" to nap, but if all else fails, they are allowed
quiet time. I'm glad my kid takes a daily nap -- she needs it AND I NEED IT!
As for eatting, I do not believe the center pushes the kids to eat, but the
kids do tend to be led by what the other kids are doing -- so they eat in
response to the other kids eatting (and napping!). Juli has learned a lot
at the center, but also is allowed a fair amount of "free play", too.
When comparing daycare centers, it was important to Jim/I to address their
activities, student/teacher ratio, schedules, discipline practices, child
evaluations ... basically we were looking for a "learning" center
environment rather than a "free-spirited" daycare environment. We particularly
wanted to be sure that Juli would be with a group fo children on her level
of age and development for a "fair amount" of the day, yet mixed with all the
other children a "part" of the day.
So, as the previous noter stated, it's important to for you to evaluate and
understand what type of "care" you want and pursue a homecare provider or
center that can meet you and your child needs ... as every parent/child have
different needs and expectations as does another parent/child. And there are
plenty of opportunities out there, so you shouldn't have too much trouble
finding a good fit.
As for the cost of care ... I believe your numbers are on the LOW SIDE!!!
We pay $138/week at Juli's center and if our second adoption comes through
in September, we'll be moving both children to a different learning center
and we'll be paying about $260/week. But I believe Jim/I are giving Juli
quality care and with it usually comes a price.
Hope this helps.
Dottie
PS: Juli does not attend a "chain"-type daycare center ... but one thing
to know if you're interviewing them (e.g. Children's World, Kindercare,
etc.) is that although they follow "guidelines and procedures",
they can vary from center to center (depending on management, funding,
clientel, etc.). So although I may not have liked the ABC center in
Thistown, I may be impressed with the ABC center in Thattown. One
benefit is that if you travel or move, your child can attend a different
center "at no additional cost" (not sure how they work the tuition
transfer ... must be via management). It's a benie if you're a travelling
Mom!! (I think it was Kristen Cox who mentioned this a year or so back.)
|
122.5 | | TOOHOT::CGOING::WOYAK | | Tue May 19 1992 17:10 | 38 |
| We have just recently gone through this as well. This is Nicole's third week
in her new daycare situation.
Nicole just turned two at the beginning of May. She had previously been
with a home daycare provider since she was 4 months. Because of the addition
of too many younger children I decided to move her to a different environment.
I also felt that she needed more interaction with children that were her own
age.
I agonized over this decision. While I was not completely happy with her
home daycare situation, it had become comfortable for both of us. I kept
thinking, "Is the situation really bad enough to move her" and "what if
the new situation does not work, then what". Did I really want to put her
through what I felt would be a terrible transition.
The end result is that the new daycare center is working out very well (After
one week, she came home knowing all the words to three songs). But it
could have gone easier. Because I was apprehensive, I think Nicole picked
up on those feelings. The first week, I went with her every morning and
spent an hour or two until I could break myself away. (She only went 1/2
days the first week). The last day that week, I just dropped her off in the
care of one of her teachers. Well, that was her best day of the week. Yes,
she did cry when I first left, but it only lasted a couple of minutes vs
the on and off crying that she experienced the first couple of days.
This is her second week of full-time care at the new center and she loves it.
She asks to "go to school", sings her songs, talks about all the "new" kids,
sometimes gets a little upset when it is time to leave daycare for the day,
and no longer cries or clings when I drop her off in the morning.
I think what helped was for us to keep talking very positively to her about
the new daycare. Asking her about it, telling her what she would be doing,
talking about the "new kids" she could play with etc.
Looking back, this transition could have gone easier if I had not been so
apprehensive about making the change.
Barbara
|
122.6 | | COMET::PAPA | Pacifism breeds violence | Mon Jun 01 1992 16:44 | 3 |
| My son started at 18 months and didn't have any problem with it. he
seemed to enjoy it until about 3rd or 4th grade. At that point I stopped
the day care.
|
122.7 | mommy guilt relief... | AKOCOA::TRIPP | | Wed Jun 10 1992 10:13 | 33 |
| I think a lot of the child's reaction is to the actual care giver. For
us we notice that he reacts much more positively to the "younger"
preschool teachers. I talking about the ones who usually have some
sort of degree in early child development, who have been only out of
college for a few years.
AJ's current teacher is a middle age woman (I'd guess 40ish), and he
has had some conflict with her, simply because she is a little less
flexible and "bouncy" than the other teachers in the preschool center.
I realize that as he progresses through regular school not every
teacher is going to be young and bubbly, so I'm not even considering
this as a problem. He will just have to adjust. However I have
mentioned this problem to the director of the center, that they may
just be a "chemistry conflict" between AJ and his teacher, and could
explain some of his discipline problems. The discipline problems seem
to be completely absent on days when the teacher is out, or during the
part of the day when he is being cared for by one of the other
"younger" teachers.
By the way, last week most of the preschool took a field trip, parents
were encouraged to come along. So I did. I arrived with AJ at his
usual arrival time, and spent about 2 hours before the bus came just
playing "fly on the wall" during song and story time. Let me tell you
I saw a this class in action, and was impressed at the amount of
learning these kids get in a day. I also saw a couple of the kids
arrive and experience separation anxiety, the tears and clingy things.
What I can vouch for is that literally by the time the parents had hit
the parking lot the kids really were happy and engaged in some sort of
activity.
Sorry to ramble.... Does this help to relieve any "mommy anxiety"??
Lyn
|
122.8 | Daycare changes for toddler | DYNOSR::CHANG | Little dragons' mommy | Wed Jun 24 1992 11:21 | 13 |
| Looks like we may have to move our kids to a new daycare center
at the beginning of September. Our kids will be 4 and almost 2 then.
I don't worry about the 4 yr old. I think he may enjoy the changes.
I do worry about the 2 yr old. This will be her second daycare
center in 3 months. She just started at the current center 3 weeks
ago and just started to enjoy it. It was a big adjustment for her.
Before this, she was home with a nanny.
I would like to make the transition as smooth as possible for her.
Any suggestions are greatly appreciated.
Wendy
|
122.9 | Why not get another Nanny ?? | SUEWIT::RUBIN | | Wed Jun 24 1992 11:33 | 8 |
|
I was just wondering why you switched to Daycare after having a Nanny ??
I have a nanny with my 6 month old, and I love it. The cost is really equivalent
to a good Daycare (from my experience).
---Sue.
|
122.10 | Reasons | DYNOSR::CHANG | Little dragons' mommy | Wed Jun 24 1992 13:03 | 17 |
| Re: .9
I switched to daycare from nanny due to several reasons. My
biggest reason is my daughter was bored at home. She needed
interaction with children at her age. Although, I also have
a 4 yr old, but he was attending nursery school and was only home
3 afternoons. Therefore, most of the time, she was the only child in
the house. My ideal solution is to have her attending daycare center
2 days a week. However, my nanny didn't want to work part-time.
Another reason that I picked daycare is stability. I had 3 nannies
for my daughter (she was home from birth to 21 months)
and **6** nannies for my son (he was home from birth to 15 months).
I am tired of uncertainty.
Hope this answers your question.
Wendy
|
122.11 | split her schedule between 2 locations? | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Wed Oct 28 1992 13:56 | 15 |
| While we try to find Ilona a full-time slot at a daycare center, we are
considering placing her at Applewood, a local center, on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays, and keeping her at her current home daycare
setting for Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Does anyone have experience in placing a toddler certain days in one
setting and other days in another? Is it too confusing? Did it work
out?
Also, I am concerned that she will greatly prefer the center and be
unhappy for the days at the home daycare.
Thanks,
L
|
122.12 | No big problem for us | GAVEL::SATOW | | Wed Oct 28 1992 14:12 | 18 |
| At one time or another, both of our children were in two different daycares,
with no major problems.
We switched once because we thought it best that Lara be in one place, but
were unhappy with the place we picked, and went back to the two places. I
guess that means that I think one good place is best, but two good places are
better than one bad one.
In our situation it was Monday thru Wednesday one place, and Thursday and
Friday the other. I seems to me that it's better to have only one changeover
during the week, but I have no experience to back that up.
I don't understand why you are concerned that she may prefer the daycare
center. I forget how old Ilona is. If she greatly prefers the daycare
center, it may be an indication that she is ready for a more structured
pre-school environment.
Clay
|
122.13 | Split schedule no problem | WILBRY::WASSERMAN | Deb Wasserman, DTN 264-1863 | Wed Oct 28 1992 14:33 | 11 |
| Laura,
When Marc turned 2, we changed his schedule from full-time at the
family daycare to Mon-Tue at a center; Wed-Fri at the family daycare.
We kept this schedule for about 9 months, at which time we gradually
converted (over a period of a month) to full-time at the center, where
he still goes. We referred to each day as either a "school day" or
a "Robin day" (and weekends are "staying home days"). He didn't find
it confusing at all. It always seemed, however, that special events at
the daycare center (field trips, holiday parties, etc.) seemed to
always be on a day Marc didn't go.
|
122.14 | | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Thu Oct 29 1992 08:32 | 11 |
| The reason I'm concerned about her preferring the center ("school") is
because I'm trying my darnedest to get her in there full time and so
far, no luck. What I'm really afraid of is that she will find the
family daycare quite lacking by comparison and become unhappy about
going there at all.
'course putting her into a center is going to deliver a knock out blow
to our budget, but what the heck. ;-)
L
|
122.15 | Our experience | WILBRY::WASSERMAN | Deb Wasserman, DTN 264-1863 | Thu Oct 29 1992 10:50 | 25 |
| Laura, I don't know what the specifics of your situation are, or what
Ilona's personality is like, but in our case, it takes Marc a VERY
LONGGGGG time to get used to new situations and people (probably a few
months until he really feels comfortable). Consequently, when he
started going to the center last year, he consistently cried every
time I dropped him off, made me carry him in, etc. Going to Robin's
house, on the other hand, was (and still is), like going to a favorite
aunt's house. Since he'd been going there since he was 4 months old,
it's almost like a second home to him. He just strolls right in and
makes himself at home.
I'm glad we started with the split schedule. Switching cold-turkey to
full-time at the center would have been too much of an adjustment. I
think it was the right time for us to start at a center, also. He's
had the opportunity to be around other kids, and do a lot of things
that Robin doesn't have the facilities for (crafts, field trips,
swimming, big playground). On the other hand, still spending 3 days a
week at Robin's gave him the freedom to just hang around the house and
"be a kid", doing whatever unstructured things came up. I thought he
still needed that at age 2.
I think you should take advantage of the opportunity to send Ilona part
time to the center (although maybe make the days there sequential, just
for continuity sake), and see how it goes. I didn't feel Marc needed
to be in a center full-time until he got closer to 3.
|
122.16 | is it her or is it just me? | JEREMY::RIVKA | Rivka Calderon,Jerusalem,Israel | Fri Nov 20 1992 01:35 | 11 |
| I don't know how it's like in the us,but I have kind of a problem with
my daughter.the "problem" is regarding some "habbits" that as far as
I know she had taken at the center she goes to.The first one is:if she
doesn't get it NOW (IT can be food,a toy,etc)-she screams her head off.
The other thing is that when she's tired,or sad,she just put her little
head on the floor,and stays there until we come and pick her up.The
first (screanig) is a pain,but the second (head on the floor)makes me
want to cry since it makes me feel so guilty.Have you ever paced those
things? what do you do?
Rivka_who feels guilty enough as it is...
|
122.17 | I think it's normal | SAHQ::HERNDON | Atlanta D/S | Fri Nov 20 1992 08:17 | 22 |
| Mitchell...10 mos does that too.
The screaming: I think they are learning independence and get
frustrated so they let it out the only way they know how. In my
daycare Mitchell is the only one who does this. He's only there
2-3 days a week. I just think some children get 'strong wills'
very early....I hope it's not of sign of what's to come. Usually,
we'll ignore it or say "Mitchell stop it" very stern. Gets his
attention and he usually quits. He's really bad when you try to
take something out of his mouth that he shouldn't have.
The laying head down: Mitchell does this and I think its because
he plays so hard his body finally tells him to lay down and rest
a minute. He likes to fight his sleep...because he learned he
could. When they're small infants they don't know how to resist
the desire for sleep. It is so hard when they can't talk.
I wouldn't worry about this nor would I necessarily blame the day care.
I think it is normal. Hopefully you'll hear from other parents with
similar experiences.
Kristen
|
122.18 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | The Son reigns! | Mon Nov 23 1992 11:40 | 10 |
|
Rivka,
My daughter is only 6 months old, and already fusses occasionally
when she can't get something (like the trash can that looks so
inviting but is six inches beyond her reach/mobility). She
doesn't go to a daycare, so I think it's just personality.
(I have no idea where she'd ever get a temper from ;-) )
Karen
|
122.19 | hitting the teach. | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Tue Nov 24 1992 13:01 | 20 |
| Tyler has been in daycare since he was 4 months old (will be 4 in Dec.)
He has been in KinderCare for about 5 months now. I love their
programs and he actually counts and understands numbers very well now.
Yesterday His teacher told me he was hitting her and he would have to
be removed from school if he didn't stop. I gathered from the
conversation that he was realy beating on her. I asked her why she
didn't give him time-out or something. I don't think she understood
the question because she doesn't speak English very well, I'm not sure
of her nationality. I then talked to the administrator and she said if
he didn't stop he would have to be removed.
Tyler doesn't hit me but he has hit my mother and friends at times but
mostly playing. I understood that at school he would get realy mad and
then hit his teacher for taking something away from him. I had a talk
with him last night and asked him not to hit his teacher again. I
don't know how much a 4 year old can understand from a conversation
like that.
Virginia
|
122.20 | I think I'm on Tyler's side | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Sun Nov 29 1992 22:56 | 24 |
| .19> Tyler... will be 4 in Dec.
> His teacher told me he was hitting her and he would have to
> be removed from school if he didn't stop.
> hit his teacher for taking something away from him.
> ... she doesn't speak English very well
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Well if I were three years old and my teacher took something away from
me but couldn't speak English well enough to understand a simple
question *from another adult*, I probably would be EXTREMELY
frustrated. I probably would not get an explanation from this teacher
that was satisfactory to my three-year-old sense of fairness and would
probably therefore pitch one helluva fit.
If I were Tyler's parent, I'd be pounding pavement looking for a
daycare with teachers fluent in English, since preschool is thorny
enough without a language barrier! But if he's "short" in that
classroom (about to move to a higher level class), I guess I would have
another talk with the director, to determine if, in the meantime, Tyler
could have one of the other preschool teachers as his primary teacher.
I know some daycares have 2 teachers in the room and assign half the
kids to one teacher, half to the other.
Leslie
|
122.21 | seems ok now., | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:28 | 14 |
| Thanks,
At this school/daycare, there are I think three teachers. One in the
morning, then the `main' teacher in the afternoon, and one comes in
around 3 to take over and do the `daycare' bit. This teacher that said
he was hitting is the 3rd shift teacher. I did talk to the director
and she said the teacher had not said anything to her about it but
sometimes things like that aren't always told to her. The teacher
hasen't said anything more about it since that day and Tyler has stoped
hitting my mother. Maybe he did understand some of that talk we had.
Thanks again,
Virginia
|