T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1035.1 | | BIGQ::MARCHAND | | Mon Oct 16 1995 09:32 | 17 |
|
Personally, with all these accidents I'd say the child isn't getting
enough adult supervision.
Does he have a lot of accidents at home? Is he proned to accidents?
(17 months old), he's probably doing a lot of exploring and may very
well be at the wrong place at the wrong time.
One of my sons (Gregory) used to have a lot of accidents and it
turned out he had a large build up in the middle ear of wax, once that
was cleaned out he was fine. Just a thought. The middle ear helps
with coordination and balance.
Maybe they should move him back to where he was before the change?
Was he fine at that time?
Rosie
|
1035.2 | | ASDG::HORTERT | | Mon Oct 16 1995 09:40 | 18 |
| Karen,
I too have kids in daycare and share your concern. My 2yr old an
1 yr old go 2-3 times a week and they are both very active. So I'm
not surprised that they would come home with a bump or bruise every
now and then. But a few things concern me about this place. I think
17 mo is kind of young still to be placing with other children 2 +.
Brit is 14mo and still kind of wabbly in walking, so she can get easily
pushed over by running 2yr olds. Second, I don't think naps should
be in a cot. My daycare still has them in cribs or for 2yr olds on mats
on the floor, so they can't fall down. Am I too cautious, but a
jungle gym at that age? It seems that there are too many kids for
the number of keepers. I have a hard enough time with my two. I
can imagine 10!
Be sure to share your concerns with them. It's better to be safe
than sorry.
Rose
|
1035.3 | scheduling convenience... | STAR::MRUSSO | | Mon Oct 16 1995 10:21 | 8 |
| It sounds to me that your son was moved up to the next group
because they needed a slot in the infant room and had an opening in
the toddler room. I would want him moved back. My son is 23 months
and very active. The jungle gym would scare me for a child that young.
Mary
|
1035.4 | MASS Law | ASABET::CKENNEDY | | Mon Oct 16 1995 10:52 | 5 |
| Massachusetts state Law is when they are 15months they moved to the
next room with is 15 months to 2.9.
The center that my kids go to cots were only used for the older kids (5
years and up). The other kids use mats.
|
1035.5 | | DECWIN::MCCARTNEY | | Mon Oct 16 1995 11:37 | 19 |
| I also have a 17 month old in daycare. She was moved out of the infant
room at 14 months, so that doesn't bother me. She, also, is very
active and has had her share of scrapes and bruises. In her center,
they include the first and second toddler classes on the playground a
lot (ages 14 months to 2 1/2 years), however that's with 20 kids and 4
adults, lots of supervision.
I'd be concerned about the fact that they ever had the merry-go-round
on pavement or cement. That's not an appropriate play surface for kids
this age. I'd also be concerned about the block incident.
As for removing the blocks from the room, the kids will just find
something else to throw. Sounds like they need either more or better
attentive supervision. This would go for the jungle gym also.
In our center, kids from 14 months through pre-K use mats. There are
no off-floor cots.
Irene
|
1035.6 | to give them some credit.. | CSLALL::JACQUES_CA | Crazy ways are evident | Mon Oct 16 1995 11:55 | 5 |
| I have to say, the fact they responded to each incident is a positive
thing. They don't just say, "Oh, accidents happen".
cj
|
1035.7 | My comments ........ | SHRMSG::HILL | | Mon Oct 16 1995 12:18 | 76 |
|
Just my 2 cents....
1. He fell off a merry-go round and hit the pavement and
scratched his chin all up. The scab is gone but he still has a red
mark where he hit. (because of this accident they moved the merry go
round to the grassy area)
17 months seems a little early for a merry-go-round to me, even small
ones. You can never trust 17 months for what they will do and in a
merry-go-round, where you can't *immediately* grab your child who may
try to get off, or lose their balance.
2. Fell or jumped off his cot and bruised his cheek and got a couple
of pin point punctures.
I agree with other reply, suggest to your daycare mats if your son is
still too young to leave a crib and they can't supply one.
3. Got hit near the eye with a guitar. This caused a bruise and some
scratches.
This can happen at any place any where there is more than one child.
I think my youngest son could even do it to himself without any
help from another child! What I'd watch out for and I would question
the teacher is, was it an accident or was it "meant" to happen becasue
your son was the part of an altercation with another possibly older
child. If the latter was true, how did the teachers handle this as it
was happening (where they there to see what happened) and if the other
child hit you son, what corrective action was taken so that the other
childs undersatnds this was not appropriate behavior.
4. Fell off/on (no one saw this happen) a wooden jungle gym and cut
his forehead (needed 2 stitches) (because of this accident they
separated outdoor time. Now only his class goes out. Before the
2-year old class was also out with him)
This one really gets to me. I would have had a hard time not
screaming "What do you mean no one saw this happen?" A 2 year old,
.....maybe, but a a 17 month old *JUST* into the new "older" group, and
who already has had a lot of bumps and bruises. No way. The
supervison wasn't here at all. You are lucky it was just stitches!! I
have two active sons, and even if the older kids were segregated, my
son could kill himself if not supervised closely in a jungle gym
setting. He's fearless as I'm sure your son is at that age. They'll
climb anything. They (the school or teacher(s)) are just not doing
there job. Maybe the teachers are used to 2 and 3 year olds, who
knows.
5. When I picked him Friday I was told he had been hit in the head with a
block another kid threw and it landed 1 inch away from where he got
stitches (Connor now has a nice bruise at the impact site). The teacher
has requested the blocks be removed from the room but the director isn't
sure she will do this as "the kids need toys to play with".
Again, as with the guitar situation, this can happen. There should be
rules for how children can play with blocks (no throwing) and there
should be corrective action taken if a child or multiple children throw
the blocks repeatively. If that's no there and communi9cated, or if
there isn't close supervision, that's the problem, not the kids, or the
type of toys.
My final comment, I agree with the past replys. I don't think there is
enough supervison for your son in this group setting, and possible your
son isn't ready for the big kids the whole day. Talk with the head
honcho and his primary teacher from the old group and the new group.
See if they can't come up with some possible solutions that will make
the situation better. Three weeks (was it) and all thes issues is
excessive and not normal in a transition period. If the school is not
willing to work with you on this then that may be your answer, they
don't care. If they are concerned for your son's well being and
transition and *your* piece of mind with your daycare choice, they
should be receptive to working with you to do what you can to make the
next 3 weeks be a safer place for your son.
|
1035.8 | is it safe ? | STOWOA::SPERA | | Mon Oct 16 1995 13:10 | 13 |
| Since you asked....Things sound a bit "loose" there. The merry go round
probably doesn't belong at the center let alone on concrete. I would
expect Mass regulations would have outlawed that.
I'd have some questions about pinpoint anything in a child who jumped
off a mat. Mat's are low to the ground. What did he hit that punctured
him ? And, I'm sorry, does the teacher wear a ring ?
Now, if it really seems like a great place and maybe your child is a
little wobbly, insist he move back in with children at his own
developmental level.
I'm sorry. I know you don't need to have extra worries but some places
aren't good for kids.
|
1035.9 | | WNRWHO::WOODS | | Mon Oct 16 1995 13:40 | 50 |
|
I believe he was moved to make room for new kids in the baby room. We
were on vacation the last 2 weeks of August and when I took him the day
after Labor Day, I was told by the teacher in his old room he had been
moved. She was surprised he was moved as where Hayley's mom (Hayley is
2 weeks older than Connor) and some other teachers there. I wasn't
happy with this and after the stitches accident I told the owner I
thought he was moved too soon.
Some more info on the stitches accident. While I was on the way to the
hospital, my husband called the owner and she kinda had a "he's an
active independent kid and accidents will happen" attitude. It bothers
me a lot no one saw what happened. I would not be as upset if they
told me x pushed him into it, Connor was climbing and fell etc. I
don't like the jungle gym being out there--I wouldn't let him on one
unless I was there to catch him/help him. The jungle gym his a wood
platform about 1 foot off the ground. One side is to the swings, one side
has a railroad tie for a step and the last two sides have slides. There is
still a large gap between the step and platform. I mentioned it to the
owner and she was going to see if something could be done but so far
nothing has been done.
Supposedly no one has fell off the cots. The pin point punctures looked
more like a scrape/rug burn. The head teacher wasn't in
there and she couldn't tell me what happened. At home he likes to walk
on beds and couches (again I only let him up when I can watch him and
kick him off if he stands up, luckily he can't climb up there yet!) and he
might have been doing that here - again no one knows.
The merry-go round is a bunch of tricycles attached together
and they go around in a circle. There is only one kid in Connor's room
that can even reach the peddels. His current teacher won't put them on
there because she can't watch 5 of them on there at one time. The accident
happened when all the kids were together and he had a different teacher
who has since left.
His teacher has said playground time is nicer now the kids are
separated. I'm happier because he doesn't have the older kids to watch
and "keep up with".
Doug (my husband) and I are discussing moving him. I'm wondering if it is
like this at daycares and this will continue no matter where we put him
and it isn't worth the transition nightmare (he has been at this center
since I went back to work) or if this is unusual and we need to get him
out of there.
Karen
|
1035.10 | Moving him "cold turkey" | DECWET::WOLFE | | Mon Oct 16 1995 13:54 | 16 |
| You asked about other daycares...
My experience at two daycares has been room
changes are sometimes "pushed" because of the
need for a space. I have been in this situation
once before and the school allowed for a transition
time (a week or two), where Lauren could go between
the two rooms as she felt comfortable. That seemed
to work fine for us.
The daycare she is in now also had a planned transition.
They were moving Lauren and her best buddy 1 week
apart. They also planned to let the kids make the move
as they were comfortable. They moved Nicole, Lauren
decided to join her and those two girls never looked
back. So much for transition...
|
1035.11 | I hate when the phone rings @work | ASIC::MYERS | | Mon Oct 16 1995 20:27 | 15 |
| The daycare that my daughters are at separate the kids into smaller
groups: infant 4wks-15 mos, toddler I 15 mos - 24 mos, toddler II
24 mos - 36 mos. I think this helps prevent the younger kids from
being overrun by the older ones. Transitions don't necessarily
happen at those ages automatically, it pretty much depends on
maturity and space available. They also have a separate play
yard for the younger (under 3) kids, with age appropriate toys.
I've also received "the call" saying that Sarah had tripped while
playing and cut her lip on the edge of a shelf (she needed 2
stitches). The teacher saw her fall, it was something that could
have happened anywhere. Her school is very good about explaining
anything from a small scratch to a bruise.
/Susan
|
1035.12 | I looked for INTENT and mixed with discovery. | NPSS::CREEGAN | | Wed Oct 18 1995 10:26 | 21 |
| Nobody's mentioned bites. My son got a lot of them the first
few weeks in the toddler room. I had mixed feelings about it
He might have been over-assertive (not exactly his nature), or
another new child moved up with the inability to express anger
correctly.
When my other son moved into the 3-year-old-room I was apprehensive,
the play structure was very big and I didn't think he should be on
it. THE VERY FIRST DAY he climbed up it, jammed his elbow between
spindles and fell, hanging by his wedged arm. I got there JUST
after it happened. We got x-rays, nothing broken, but he favored
that arm for over a week. I could tell it hurt.
Within the week I got a letter from the President of the company
that makes the play structure. They had changed the design.
The unit at daycare had been ECO-ed (indeed, there were new
boards added) and this accident should never happen again. I'm
not the kind that $ue$. I felt the situation was addressed
correctly. Also, I've noticed over the years that the play
structure continues to be ECO-ed. (Engineering Change Order)
I feel good about that.
|
1035.13 | continued corrections? | CSLALL::JACQUES_CA | Crazy ways are evident | Wed Oct 18 1995 13:41 | 7 |
| RE.12
I'm all for remedying a bad product, but needing continued
revisions? I should think it should have been removed.
Just my opinion.
cj
|
1035.14 | Mfg better than McDonald's hot coffee, they changed. | NPSS::CREEGAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:59 | 10 |
| RE .13
There was a draw-bridge type section. It had chains
on the sides. They left the chains and added
wooden bannisters. I thought the chains (2 levels of them)
were enough, but something must have happened where they
decided there was some exposure (accident report) and they
ECO-ed it again. It's the type of structure you see
communities getting together and building in a newer
playground.
|
1035.15 | | NETCAD::BRANAM | Steve, Hub Products Engineering, LKG2-2, DTN 226-6043 | Fri Oct 27 1995 13:15 | 55 |
| I kind of waffle on this subject. Our son (5 yrs) and daughter (19 mos) go to an
in-home daycare. We know from over 2 years there that the lady who takes care of
them is very careful and loving. She is very conservative in what she lets them
get into.
This summer, there was a little boy who was about 12 months old, an only child.
His parents started getting very paranoid about minor scrapes. Based on our
experience, I would rate the caregiver as excellent, but these parents began
questioning her about everything. There is a bruise on his arm. How did it
happen? Why didn't you prevent it? How did his finger get scraped? Why didn't
you prevent it?
I attribute a lot of this to new-mother-syndrome, combined with concern fed from
the news. I learned from my own kids that children that age are prone to small
accidents. Between their own physical instability and having other kids around,
minor bruises and scrapes are bound to happen. Our pediatrician called it
"banana legs" when my son's legs looked like someone had been tapping out a drum
solo up and down his shins.
Last week, my daughter made it to the top of the slide on our big swing set
while I was raking leaves. This was five feet off the ground, on skinny metal
rungs about a foot apart. I stuffed my heart back down my throat and got behind
her as she slid down. She toddled back around and climbed back up, happy as a
clam, this time with my hands following her. At this age, kids are always a step
away from disaster. The slightest thing could mean severe injury or even death,
yet they make it through largely unscathed, in ignorant bliss of the danger they
have averted. Meanwhile, we as parents go nuts from the stress. Around every
turn lurks danger, even in Barney's world, yet we cannot possibly help them
avoid each one. Sometimes I think it's a wonder they ever survive past age 2.
Our daycare lady finally had to tell the other boy's parents that she couldn't
take care of him. They said she just didn't want to get reported, and her
response was there was nothing to report. I agree. I believe she is very
attentive and concerned; she is certainly not negligent or abusive. The level of
care they were demanding would require a person to give absolutely undivided
attention to the boy. That just can't be done with more than one child to take
care of, and in reality cannot be achieved even with just one. Hopefully they
will relax a bit and realize that we all take a few lumps and come out no worse
for wear.
I don't want to trivialize the concerns in .0. It is important to be concerned,
yet maintain a realistic perspective. Trusting your child's care to someone else
is the most difficult thing you can do. Don't compromise your standards, but
make sure they are realistic. It sounds like the daycare center is flexible and
is reacting to correct things. A cynic would just say that they are trying to
avoid lawsuits, but we cannot possibly foresee everything that might be
dangerous, even when in hindsight it looks incredibly stupid. Hopefully nothing
serious happens before we recognize an unsafe situation. Take a cold hard look
at things there and ask yourself about every possible accident that could
happen, then suggest some changes to them. If these are reasonable, and the
center is reasonable and sincere, they should listen and implement the changes.
Certainly they don't want anything bad to happen.
Life is risky. Childhood is fraught with risk. We have to live with some risk,
but we can and should constantly look for ways to reduce it.
|
1035.16 | | WRAFLC::WOODS | | Mon Oct 30 1995 06:54 | 9 |
| Leaving Connor with someone is hard. I was trying to gage if this is
normal or not. I would hate to change his daycare (and upset him in
the process) for something that is normal.
We've had a long talk with the director and found out changes they
were implementing and expressed our concerns. So far so good.
Karen
|
1035.17 | the ratio seems rather high to me... | FORTY2::FITZSIMONS | mailbus 400 | Thu Nov 30 1995 11:31 | 12 |
| Over here in the UK, the ratio for private nurseries (daycare) is 1 adult to 3 children, up to the age of 2 and a
half. Or at least that's what the ratio is in the Digital nursery. I was happy with that for my son. He's a very
lively child, and despite being in a room containing 16month olds to 2 and a half year olds, he hardly had any
scrapes. He was bitten a few times, but that's a different matter. Unfortunately, if 1:8 is Georgia law, it sounds
like the ratio will be the same whatever daycare you choose. I would not have been happy with 1:8 for my son.
As for changing daycare, I moved my son in May after he'd spent 2 and a half years in the Digital nursery. I was
worried sick. But he adapted instantly, and has made many new friends since moving. He has never been unhappy at
going there in the morning. I wouldn't worry about transition trauma - I think children are very adaptable..
Sue
|