Yes I thought it was pretty obvious |
Is he still napping? Mine dropped their naps early and then really needed to come home by 4. I would work later in the evening if I needed to be my husband and I staggered our hours to make it possible. I would definitely look into this for your child’s happiness not for preschool applications. |
Typical for our school apps. They rank them on age appropriate social skills and development. Basically trying to screen for developmental issues that may disrupt the class. |
This is your issue. He needs to be set up for success. He’s overtired and overstimulated. At 2 it would be better to come home with a nanny half day and nap at home. He may still need that quiet time going into 3. If you’re going to spring for a private school you might as well get him a nanny. Honestly, we are both working parents and it sucks but our 4 year old still needed that quiet time in the afternoon. |
Ok now we see the problem. You are keeping him there for way too long. Totally agree with the PP that’s too long for a two year old and tantrums will occur. Ironically at my school the child with the most temper tantrums in my DD’s class is also the kid that is in extended care the longest. You are better off keeping him there for shorter periods of time. |
| Your son is there for twelve hours a day and you are wondering why he is having a hard time. |
+1 Even the best-behaved children in my kid’s daycare class start losing it by 4. I would try to stagger your work hours so he’s not spending so much time there. |
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The least of your worries is how to get him into private school.
I can’t speak for other private schools but at my private school there’s a strong sense of parent involvement in the school. Unfortunately that means parents have flexible jobs, or one has a stay at home mom, or there is a grandparent or a nanny willing to pick up the slack. Even the parents with high flying jobs get involved. At least at the pre k or kindergarten level the school wants to see that parents will be part of the community. Yes understandably to be able do that smacks of privilege, but that’s why it’s elite private school. You may want to think right now about how working long hours may not give you the flexibility that private schools are looking from its parents. |
I just phrased it in terms of how overworked and underpaid the daycare teachers were and how most of the questions were for older kids (like how well can my kid read? No, she sort of sings the ABCs but she definitely thinks ellemennopie is a word). The admissions director was very down to earth and said that usually they get kids who haven’t been in organized care applying to PK3 so they didn’t even think that people would be asking daycare for recommendations. She said it’s more an assessment for kids with quantifiable skills and waived it. |
+1 to the first part. Spend your money on a nanny and a good half-day preK3 program. He’s struggling right now, so if you have the funds - use them to provide a nurturing environment. As for the second part of this statement, just wow. This is so out of touch and elitist. OP’s child’s application is not going to suffer because she and her husband work long hours at what I’m sure are at least somewhat prestigious jobs. And involvement like coming into the classroom to read a book occasionally or for conferences or even being on the spring gala auction committee after a handful of years at the school is very different from leaving work at 4 pm every day to get your child from daycare. Even lost-COVID there are many jobs that do not allow (maybe not explicitly but optically) for you to leave every day at 4 for daycare pick up. OP is in NYC not Seattle. |
Yes but OP is thinking of hiring a nanny to do this and many of us are agreeing that is a good idea. I also cut my hours to pick my kid up early but if I couldn’t have I would have had some one else do it. He was doing well with a nanny before and now is not doing well- that’s so much more important to figure out than preschool applications. |
I agreed with the first part of the statement, so no argument there. What I don’t agree with is the statement that schools look for parents who can be heavily involved. And as for the 4 pm thing - it’s not realistic if you work at Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley or Apollo or Latham or any number of NYC firms. Your flexing your schedule to accommodate a 4 pm schedule in DC is just not possible for many working moms in NYC. The culture is not accepting of that and if OP is working at one of these places and does this daily she will lose her job. My point is that the comment is out of touch and not applicable to NYC work culture. Why do you think the OP hasn’t done this yet? Probably because she can’t. |
PP above yours is in a loser job or is one of the useless c suite. Has no idea what work is. As someone with a big job, the biggest joke on women is reduced hours. |
Hi hon, no one understands what you wrote above. Maybe try posting when you’re not drunk. |
I’m the loser PP you are referring to. I’m happy with my choices but my point was that this child might benefit from being home earlier in a quiet environment, which can be with a nanny. I think the parental involvement thing is BS but I’m not in NYC so I don’t really know, maybe it’s different there. My main point is that this kid is clearly having a hard time and I’d focus on that and not what preschool he will get into. |