No, I didn’t feel the need to. He learns a lot at school already. I am a former teacher and it’s not about how long kids are in school. What’s important is what they actually do in the classroom. What can the teacher accomplish with the group of kids? What are the behavioral expectations of the school? What are the consequences? There is a lot of built in wasted time in a regular school day, add in behavior issues and the kids might be lucky to get 15 minutes of direct instruction in a 7-8 hour school day. I have seen it and lived it. If your kid is stuck in a class with intensive behavioral issues, they’re not going to be learning much even if they’re there 12 hours a day and they go to school year round. They’re just going to be sitting around watching the teachers being stressed out. There is a lot of turnover at the daycare and it is not hard to see why. When my kid was there, is was constant. Teachers leaving all the time, new assistants coming in every 2 days, etc. At the preschool, I noticed the teachers were much happier. Possibly due to the breaks they get compared to the daycare teachers. The same teacher and assistant were there the entire year. No one left. |
+1 This has been my experience as well. We have our kid at a daycare in Tyson’s corner and can’t wait to switch to a proper preschool. The teachers just aren’t very qualified and experienced. It seems like there’s a few activities they do over the course of the day but the facility/rooms are so small that it’s loud and crazy all day. I think it’s worth the reduction in coverage and the cost is about the same. |
I’m sure there’s a lot of variation but we’ve been pleasantly surprised and pleased with the teacher retention at our church run very part time preschool. Most teachers have been there well over a decade. |
This is a great example of why it is important to tour and ask questions for any daycare or preschool you are considering. Our daycare has had zero turnover this year, and the teachers don't seem stressed at all. Many are pretty young, but they are so sweet with the kids. The class is a little bigger than I'd like. Also the notion that all daycares are just "babysitting" is just so ridiculous it doesn't merit a response. |
Seems like you’re defending your particular situation and daycare. You’re free to keep your kid in daycare if that’s the best fit for them. The discussion is generalizing about what’s provided overall since this is an anonymous forum. |
As I said my kid is in a traditional preschool. I was tentatively agreeing. |
I am not this PP but probably who you meant to respond to. Well, right back at you. You are arguing that daycare is bad because your child's daycare was bad. I can only assume because you don't want to admit that you didn't properly vet your child's daycare. You also seem to believe that children of working parents shouldn't get preschool education. Those parents made the choices they did and all their children deserve is "babysitting". I can't begin to express how transparent your insecurity and desire to justify your choices by attacking others is. |
+1. So weird. |
Right, public school is essentially babysitting too like daycare. You need to go private or homeschool. |
I think you’re mixing up various PP with me. I didn’t say anything about babysitting at daycares and justifying choices or what’s worse. Where did I attack someone? In my experience it’s all very specific to each persons situation. My observations overall are across many daycares and preschools I’ve used and or toured to develop a general opinion. Not one bad daycare and one good preschool as you seem to imply. With costs being the same, better care at preschools in my area. |
Thanks for this!! PP has me feeling terrible about utilizing preschool at our daycare facility, which was probably their point with their rude post. |
I am still so confused by this because I live in Arlington. Camps that go right up until school starts - Arlington County Parks and rec - sign up is late Feb Congressional (Congo) camp - sign up early Feb Columbia. Baptist - sign up early January Knights of Columbia Camp Sarraka Steve and Kates NoVa Fencing If you look at the Arlington Parks and Rec catalog that comes out each January, you can find Arlington run camps and many private vendors listed in the same catalog - Baroody Camps, Mad Science, Sci Genius, etc. I suggest you do an internet search for “Arlington parks and red camps summer 2023” and study the catalog and sign up process to get an idea what is available for next year. |
Some people can’t see past their own experiences and think their knowledge covers every possible scenario. My kids have been at Bright Horizons, in home daycare, and a Reggio preschool that was full day, full year coverage. We left BH before the preschool curriculum started, but we stay in touch with kids who did, and my kids definitely had a preschool curriculum at the church run daycare. It’s 100% possible to have full-time coverage and quality age appropriate instruction. It’s not easy to find and it often takes pre-planning, but it exists. |
I interpreted it as judgement that you were using a “church” preschool. IME some parents are oddly snobby about those and don’t consider them as high quality. ![]() |
Why are you responding to my response as if you posted it? Looks like we have another troll thread. |