T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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966.1 | All kids misbehave... | JUPITR::MAHONEY | | Thu Jun 13 1991 13:36 | 16 |
|
First off, is the woman a registered child care provider or is she a
friend or neighbor? Because I have the feeling that she can't handle
all these children herself, if she isn't used to it.
Second, I do feel that she should have spoken to Brian before she
yelled at your son a second time. I realize that not always you can
speak calmly to a child to get them to listen. But the first time
a child is told to do something it should be spoken in a calm tone.
Not yelling at him right off. It sounds to me like the children get
along fine, it might be the sitter that's the problem, No?
Just my opinion.
Sandy
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966.2 | not abusive but change | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Thu Jun 13 1991 13:36 | 12 |
| I think her actions are possibly not the wisest, or the calmest,
but not having seen any of the situations described, I don't see
anything abusive.
But it's clearly a serious mismatch between your values and
expectations and hers, and you should make new care arrangements
as soon as possible. You might want to consider a more organized
environment rather than family care; your son's showing the kinds
of misbehavior that Steven (7) engages in when he's bored. It was
especially bad last summer just before he started school.
--bonnie
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966.3 | We switched from homecare -> learning center/daycare for just THOSE reasons! | CALS::JENSEN | | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:02 | 49 |
|
Ditto, Bonnie.
We were in a similar situation. While things were going fairly smoothly,
the sitter could manage her three kids, my kid (and the many others she
accepted on a day-to-day basis). BUT, there were those occasions when it
became blatantly obvious to Jim/I that she was "over-extended" ... and
you couldn't predict NOR avoid those many unexpected and unplanned
events which could (and usually did!) "upset the apple cart" (so to say!).
I did NOT want my child in an environment which was on "rocky ground".
I did not want my child subjected to irrational behavior (it's OK to spill
juice on the sofa, but it's not OK to contest having your shoes tied ...
it's OK to miss more naps than are taken ... it's OK to "fight" over toys
... it's OK to play in the snow barefoot ... it's OK for "me" (the sitter)
to scream at you and even "swat" (not spank, but swat) you when my nerves
are ruffled ...). Not to mention how she solved her "over-extended"
situation when an accident resulted in an emergency Pedi appointment
(eg. you never knew WHO was now watching your kid, where your kid was,
when your kid would be back ... and worst yet, if your kid was being
watched by a 5-year old!!!!!).
Well, six months of chaos and confusion in an UNsettled environment was
enough for Jim/I to "can" homecare! (I know there's MANY good homecare's
available, we were NOT one of the lucky ones to find one!) ... we then
moved Juli into a learning center/daycare environment.
At the LC, rules are the same day-after-day-after-day. There's a lot
MORE consistency, a lot MORE control, a lot MORE structure, a LOT, LOT
MORE activity (to keep them happy, BUSY and usually out of trouble) and
discipline is handled in a very positive way (no yelling, but you sit on
a chair outside of the "fun" environment).
We saw a complete 180 in Juli's attitude and behavior within two weeks
of the transition to the learning center/daycare. Oh, she's far from
a perfect child (even in my wildest dreams!!!!), but she sure has come
a long way these past several months ... not to mention the improvement
in HER happiness. She just loves it there and we don't have to worry
about the kind of day she is having (we know she is very happy there),
she's doing great there (no behavorial upsets) and more importantly,
I just can't envision them yelling at her or striking her NO MATTER HOW
BAD IT GETS! In fact, we have always said "if MY kid frays YOUR nerves,
call us -- we WILL pick her up ...".
So we, too, had similar problems with homecare ... and we are extremely
pleased with Juli's learning center/daycare (Hudson Children's Center,
Hudson, MA).
Dottie
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966.4 | care that was terrible for your kid isn't necessarily terrible | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:26 | 30 |
| Dottie,
Your story illustrates why personality match is as important as
anything else when it comes to choosing family daycare. Except
for "it's ok to swat," which it's not, and a bit more organization
around who takes care of the kids when Julie has to rush her own
kid to the emergency room (the youngest fillin is 16 and it's
always at Julie's), your note could pretty well describe our
daycare situation.
I don't see "ok to spill juice, not okay to fight shoes" as an
irrational difference. Not fighting about shoes is something a
very small child can understand, and usually rebellion is
deliberate. Spilling juice requires a lot more coordination and
is seldom done with malicious intent. Quarreling over toys, if it
doesn't extend to hitting or to the bigger kid taking advantage of
the little kid, is just something they have to learn to settle
among themselves. (And you'd be surprised how often the
20-month-olds find a way to tell the 5-year-olds to take a hike.)
I can't imagine Julie ever getting ruffled enough to swat anyone.
She manages 3 of her own and 2-3 others just fine. But it is
noisy, and hectic, and all the rest.
But then David is a mellow child and he's doing very well there.
He likes Julie's daughters and he's growing up very polite.
Obviously the similar environment didn't suit you and your
daughter at all.
--bonnie
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966.5 | | MRKTNG::CHANG | | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:36 | 9 |
| re: .3
Dottie,
Robin should give you a discount for giving such wonderful
comments about her center. At least, she should offer
you extra hotdogs at this Friday's cookout :-))
Wendy
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966.6 | Same environment, Bonnie? | CALS::JENSEN | | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:50 | 26 |
|
Bonnie:
Again, the biggest problems Jim/I had with our homecare provider was:
. yes, she did swat my child (more than once)
. she did leave the kids UNattended (at home and in cars)
. she did leave a 5 year old "babysitting" a 13 month old
. she didn't know what the kids were doing half the time
(she always depended on a 9-year old and a 5-year old
to watch the two 1-1/2 year olds and TELL HER if
something wasn't going right)
. the big kids could (and did) hit/push around the little kids
. meals, naps, diaper changes didn't always occur
. yes, there was CONTINUAL disorganization, chaos, confusion
and noise
. there was NO structured activity (other than TV!) ...
crayons were available if the child had an interest
. the sitter would not hesitate to contact ANYONE to fill-in
for her
. I would show up "promptly" at 2:30 pm daily ... many, many
times no sitter, no kids (and she was warned I had a
3:00 pm Pedi appointment!)
Not sure if you can say this is similar to your homecare environment,
Bonnie ... but it's NOT the environment Jim/I would place Juli in.
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966.7 | We'll be there ... | CALS::JENSEN | | Thu Jun 13 1991 14:56 | 6 |
|
Wendy:
Are you going to tomorrow's cookout? Jim/I are planning on attending.
Dottie
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966.8 | | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Thu Jun 13 1991 15:01 | 8 |
| I have a real problem with her telling you that you have to take your
child whenever you have a day off. *I* decide if I need a day to get
things done, work from home, and so on. If I want Gina there, she's
there. If not, the sitter is doing the job she gets paid for.
The situation as you describe it is more than I would put up with.
judy
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966.9 | very similar | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Thu Jun 13 1991 15:16 | 45 |
| Dottie --
I said there was no hitting or leaving kids unattended. I'll say
it again. THAT would indeed be off limits for me -- though it
isn't for everybody.
But otherwise, yes.
No structured activity, yes. Pool play, toys to run around with,
coloring books, playing house, playing with beach toys in the
sandbox, following ants around the yard. I don't believe in
structured activity for most 20-month-olds. My opinion only.
Having the older kids help out with the younger kids, yes. A
5-year-old isn't old enough to be responsible for a 1.5-old with
no adults around, but a 5-year-old is more than capable of
notifying an adult if the younger kid is doing something off
limits. And generally delights in getting the younger kid in
trouble.
Meals happen when people are hungry. Naps happen when and if
people are sleepy. Diaper changes happen when somebody's dirty.
What you'd consider criminally chaotic and confusing, yes. Noise,
yes. In copious quantities. Usually screaming with laughter,
occasionally tears, mostly half a dozen people talking at once.
Warm. Friendly. Welcoming. Kind. Sympathetic, compassionate.
Listening. The kind of place where everybody feels welcome. So
everybody does show up. Husband gets off work at 3, sister and
boyfriend, neighbors, mother, other friends. After a year I know
most of the people who are likely to be there when I pick up
David, but every now and then a new one turns up. The kind of
place it's good to be in. Sometimes I have trouble leaving in the
morning, not because David's clingly but because I want to stay
and talk.
To me, those are more important than academics or educational
qualifications or scheduled activities. The place your daughter
goes to sounds like it's perfect for you and her, but from my
perspective it sounds too rigid, regimented, and pressured for my
20-month-old. It might be the finest school in New England, but
it would be bad for me and David.
--bonnie
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966.10 | I'd leave | EXIT26::MACDONALD_K | no unique hand plugs the dam | Fri Jun 14 1991 09:32 | 14 |
| To .0:
I agree wholeheartedly with .8. When you pay for daycare for your
child, whether or not you go to work after you drop your child off
shouldn't have any impact on the arrangement. There have been days
when I've brought my daughter to her sitter when I wasn't going to
work after - she didn't have a problem with it. Yours shouldn't
either. I'd find a new one, even though I know that's a difficult
task. But I just couldn't deal with the type of person you've
described.
Good luck,
Kathryn
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966.11 | A few thoughts. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Fri Jun 14 1991 09:46 | 28 |
| RE: .0
In my opinion, the provider should be reported to the OFC. Family
daycare providers are licensed to provide care at their home only.
Sending the kids to a neighbor is not condoned. I personally would
call the OFC and request an un-announced visit. Since my wife provides
care, I am somewhat familiar with the rules. As an example: Daycare
providers are forbidden from congregating at one providers home for any
function. This is because licensing is determined by the size of the
home and the number of adults normally working there. Other than
"public" places, no group functions can be held. This is to insure
that the proper amount of play space is available. While this appears
to be a bit extreme, it does minimize the possibility of a group of
providers from covering for another who may want the day off.
Abusive reactions to a child mis-behaving, in my book, is not acceptable.
Singling out an individual is also not acceptable. If the provider has
a problem with one child, the problem should be worked with the parent,
not the child. We too have had this problem with one child. It turns
out that the family had lost a dog shortly before the behavior
problems. A few days of extra attention and pro-active discipline, and
the problem was solved.
Would this behavior be called child abuse? Unlikely, although I don't
feel it is the right type of behavior. This provider does not have the
right attitude to be working with children (IMHO).
Dan
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966.12 | | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | Just A Country Boy | Fri Jun 14 1991 10:38 | 14 |
| I don't think that this warrants child abuse, although I would not keep
my child in this type of environment. As you may or may not know, my
wife does in home care. There is an agreement between her and the
people she sits for. My wife told the parents what she does for
discipline, what kind of activities the children will be doing, car or
no car, etc. The children are not allowed off of our premises. There
is even a plan if someone should be injured.
I reccomend in the next (daycare) situation you find yourself in, that
you draft up a thorough contract covering any and all situations which
may arise. This will give you some peace of mind as well as giving you
guidelines to address any issues in the future.
Mike
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966.13 | Tough decisions.... | WHEEL::FULLER | | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:35 | 30 |
| Thank you all for your responses.
As I said before, I do not wish to get her "in trouble". As it turned
out, last night when we picked up the kids she was as sweet as pie.
She said the kids behaved wonderfully all day. Not another word was
said.
I asked her if there was a problem with Monday and she said no, but
then tried to pry out what we're doing (which is none of her business).
I really feel that when she has a bad day, she just "takes it out" on
us. She's only human. I personally can not deal with this after I've
worked all day. I feel she should discuss problems with me, NOT with
my son.
She did ASK me if the kids could play at the neighbors and I said I had
no problem with that. I can not blame her for that. But, when she got
complaints from the neighbors, she should have discussed it with me and
let me know that they would not be allowed to go there anymore. That
would have been fine.
Again this morning, my five-year old daughter said she did not want to
go there. When I asked her why, she just said "because". That's all I
ever get out of her.
So, I have decided to find another sitter. I do not want to leave her on
bad terms as I may need a backup sitter someday.
Again, thank you all for your wonderful responses.
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966.14 | The yelling part gets me | FSOA::EPARENTE | | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:38 | 14 |
|
0.:
I would be extremely concerned over my Daycare provider yelling at my
children. And, if my 4 year old told me she didn't like going there
because she was yelled at. From what you have described I wouldn't
want her to provide care for my children, nor anyone elses if that is
how she does it. If it were me, I think I would report her. How else
would the OFC be informed of these types of situations if people just
pull their kids out and not report the reasons.
just my 2 Cents
elizabeth
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966.15 | Not my kind of child care | SCAACT::COX | Dallas ACT Data Ctr Mgr | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:53 | 18 |
| I have to say that I don't see child abuse here, but I also don't feel
comfortable with this person, and would feel a sense of urgency to move
my child from there.
I believe she is being unfair, but it does sound as if your son may be
difficult and she is not equipped to deal with such a child. Perhaps you
both have some problems to work, and neither should ignore them (MY
opinion of course, based on the little info you gave)
Regarding your keeping them on your days off: I disagree with that but if
she insists you keep them, then you should pay 4/5 of the weekly cost. If
you let her get away with anything more then you are setting a precedence
and allowing her this injustice. I'm assuming your child will not be there
any longer but if he was, I'd not tell her when I'm taking vacation - just
drop him off as you normally do, and have a great day!
FWIW,
Kristen
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966.16 | Daycare | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Jun 14 1991 15:04 | 20 |
| IMO any attack on a kids self-esteem, especially name calling is verbal
abuse.
I have had to deal with this issue of day care providers only being
available 'if your working'. Some day care providers operate that
way...as far as I am concerned I stay away from those with that
attitude.
They are providing a service (child care)... and being paid for it.
What the parent does during that time is none of their business as
long as the parent can be reached in an emergency. Obviously there
should be some give and take too.
One potential provider (I didn't hire her) hit me with this line
during the interview: "and there will be NO stopping on errands on
the way home from work... you are to come STRAIGHT here after work"
What was I doing... hiring a mother!
Jeff
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966.17 | make sure son doesn't think he was expelled | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Mon Jun 17 1991 13:42 | 18 |
| >>I do not feel she has the right to tell him that she doesn't want him
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>there anymore and she won't take him anymore.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
She said that?? I'd be furious, and I'd find a new caregiver ASAP.
I don't have a real big problem with yelling (the sheer volume of it),
but I have a problem with the message that was yelled! Make sure your
son knows that YOU are changing the arrangements because you don't like
the way she yelled at him and denigrated him, and because you want the
caregiver (not her neighbors) to be watching him.
As for not wanting to burn bridges, I wouldn't feel that THAT bridge
was safe to cross again anyway!
Leslie
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966.18 | Daycare whether at work or ... not ...
| SPRNT::SMART | | Mon Jul 01 1991 16:01 | 22 |
| As a working mom of three, I have had quite a few experiences with both
good and not-so-good daycare situations in private home and "daycare"
situations.
I have to say that I would remove my children from that home immediately.
If I can't feel that my children are cared for by a caring, loving
individual (or group), I can't leave them. Day care takes up such a
major portion of their lives, how they are treated will affect them now
and for the rest of their lives. I can't take the chance and let
someone else hurt my children's self-esteem --- their most important
asset.
I also need to make one more comment regarding daycare while you are
not at work. I have no problems with that ... however, I am not surprised
by your sitter's response, given her general attitude ... but you made
a comment indicating it is none of her business of your whereabouts (if
I'm misquoting, I'm sorry). It is. If there is an emergency with your
child, you would want to know.
Good Luck!
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966.19 | hmmmmm!! | PERFCT::TRIPP | | Wed Jul 31 1991 14:39 | 20 |
| A couple thoughts here, we recently had a dental appointment, no big
deal just a little tiny cavity to be filled, but before the dentist
began he asked my permission to use "verbal restraint", I said OK, but
wasn't quite sure what he was talking about. It was basically
permission to raise his voice *just a little*, and speak rather firmly
to my son, to keep him still in the chair. As for the way I saw it, he
didn't really need my permission but it was a nice gesture. Maybe
yelling is considered child abuse, I don't really know.
As for you immediate problem, if you think you provider is overwhelmed
and has too many kids, she probably does. A license allows 6 kids per
adult (in MA), but many providers will only take 4 or 5 full time just
for that reason. If she is taking more than 6 at a time, then report
her, she is breaking the law! From my observations home daycare
generally is unstructured, unplanned, but in most cases still well
under control.
Follow you head and heart, if it doesn't feel fuzzy it probably isn't!
Lyn
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