| I think the purse in the bawonderful is a wonderful strategy. My kid is past this stage and while I never forgot to take him to daycare I have gotten out of work and driven to his school to get him, not remembering that he's at camp, or driven home right past my mom's where I am supposed to pick him up. So I know I am capable of doing this. |
| No they don't. If you regularly drop off I don't see how you can forget but if you are the parent who is just the back up or doesn't do it regularly, then I can see it happening. Good for your child's school. It is a great thing to do. |
Great idea, thanks for sharing! |
While the calls might save a life, I actually think the goal is likely more practical. If your daycare knows they won't have X number of infants today, or that they'll be below ratio until 10, or whatever, they can arrange staffing to suit. For example, if you're in MD where you can have 2 teachers with up to 6 toddlers, or 3 with up to 9, and you know you only have 6 today you can move the third teacher to cover the absent infant teacher. If you have 6 toddlers but don't know if the 7th is at the doctor and arriving any moment, then you need to hire a sub. |
|
Daycares also usually want to know why you aren't there, particularly when there's an illness and they want to alert other parents.
|
|
Our daycare does not call. I kind of wish they would, but would prefer that they pay more attention to my child first (vs taking one caregiver away to make phone calls).
I read that WP article when it was first run (in the magazine, I believe) and was absolutely horrified. B/c the circumstances are SO MUNDANE and I could TOTALLY see myself or DH getting stressed out, and then one little blip in the routine would lead to a tragedy. DH didn't see what I was so worked up about. His thought: "We're not idiots." But my point was those parents weren't idiots either (I don't think). We do have a schedule in which DH ALWAYS does dropoff and I ALWAYS do pickup which I think lessens some of my fears. |
|
My daycare used to call and she did request that we call if we're going to be late dropping off. But now she has so many kids, I don't think she notices so much. I did read that article a couple years ago when DS was an infant and it totally freaked me out. I'm generally the drop off and pick up person. If someone else takes DS to daycare, I always wait until 15 or 20 minutes past when I know they would have been dropped off and call that person to see how the drop off went to ease my mind. For rear facing children, I think it is especially easy forget them if they fall asleep - can completely see how that would happen after reading the article.
Another idea in addition to the bag in the back that I read was to put a large stuffed animal in the carseat when your child isn't there - then put the animal on your front passenger seat on top of your stuff when you put the child in the car. |