Whoa--$500/month!?! I don't know what these other posters are talking about. I'm with you OP, there should be some middle ground on price, and $500 isn't it. I'm UMC, and my children attend our Ward 3 IB school...and I would be pissed if they started charging such a ridiculous price. What is the name of this provider? |
| Is the Tyler aftercare still Polite Piggies? You're lucky to have that option. They do a pretty good job. I think they have a sliding scale too. I'd prefer that over DCPS aftercare. |
Polite Piggies charges $500/month? They should change their name to "Greedy Piggies." |
Their website says it's $21/day and there is a sliding scale for lower income families. Before care is an additional $8/day. |
Because in most cases, you get what you pay for. If you pay for very high-quality care, you may get enriching options like gardening, language clubs, music lessons, organized sports, robotics, dance, field trips, etc. If you take the low-ball offer, you may get 40 kids in a room watching videos with minimal supervision. Obviously the former costs more than the latter. |
I suspect it's more the case of holding a vote and majority rules. It would be chaos indeed if everyone designed their own aftercare program. That said, there have been schools which in the past have offered both the free aftercare, and the pricier enrichment variety. Looks like a great way to create a miniature caste-system at the ES level - everyone can tell who the "haves" and "have nots" are. |
| OP needs to talk to the principal. Something can probably be worked out but DCUM isn't the best venue. |
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Principal can't do anything. It's the way the school has it set up.
Ridiculous. My child will be in aftercare for all of 30 minutes a day. I teach in the area. It's a racket. |
Fair enough. I guess I'm just stunned that the school would allow a change if the default. I work at another title 1 school. It offers DCPS and private aftercare. And parents can choose. I'd happily be a 'have' in a 'have not' aftercare. |
How are you so sure about that? Anyway I'm betting there is some kind of agreement on the fees for low income parents at the outsourced program. |
| OP, depending on your child's SN you may find that any aftercare is a poor solution. The transition to DCPS is tough for many 3 year olds, and aftercare can be too much on top of that. It's not really like daycare. Not sure why you are so adamant about finding the lowest quality aftercare ... |
My child has SN and I was going to say the same thing. Low quality aftercare with high ratios is not something I would want for him. Even good aftercare can be tough on a kid with SN after a long day, especially when they are little. |
| OP never said she was low income. She just doesn't want to have to go with a much more expensive option. She wants a choice. |
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If you need 30 minutes of care, consider a babysitter, possibly another parent or grandparent.
Having free PS3 and choices of aftercare is really not imposing anything on you. Aftercare is not a "right" |
| i also actually just learned that our DCPS school (where we just enrolled our 3yo) is switching from DCPS aftercare to a contractor, cost to be determined. as far as i can tell from the parents I currently know there, no one had any specific complaints about the DCPS program and it included all sorts of fun optional activities on site for a small fee. but maybe something was awry with the DCPS aftercare that I wasn't told about. i'm not terribly excited to be paying for 3 hours of fancy new instructional activity at the end of a long day for my 3yo, who I suspect would be better off turned loose on the playground with supervision and a snack. |