And what does a single parent do in that situation with multiple classes? They figure it out. One family brought their 2 younger elementary kids with them to BTS last night and they were running all around and crinkling water bottles during the presentation. It was rude and obnoxious. So yes in that situation I judge that both parents came instead of keeping the kids home with one parent. |
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When I was kid, there was a whole group of kids who went to the library as a form of free after school care. Some kids went to the library and other kids went to Jelleff. And some went to the official after school care. Most of the library crowd was first gen. Jelleff was a mix.
Anyway, there are sketchy people at libraries. I wouldn't do it. She'd be safer at home alone. |
The library is probably worried that a group of 14 year olds hanging out together would get loud. |
This is the best approach—have a trusted neighbor they can go to. By the way, If I am going to be home anyway, I have no problem being an emergency go-to person for a kid in the neighborhood. |
. No |
| Just don’t go and ask the teachers to share any slides or papers. |
| No way. Just bring the kid with you. There are always a few people who do this. |
| With all the homeless that I see in our libraries, no effing way. |
| Can they read in the school library? |
| Libraries frequently have a lot of shady people in them, yes, even “nice, suburban” libraries. Also it’s not a librarians job to supervise your kid. I’d either skip BTS night or bring your kid w you. |
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I have a 9 year old and told him he was staying in the library on his own for 1.5 hours. I had him use the restroom beforehand, he had work to do, and I gave him clear instructions (he had a study room in the children's section) on how to manage. I just never actually left the library. I wanted to see how he would respond to the situation and circumstances.
All of that to say, he did a great job. Did exactly as he was supposed to, but despite how well he did (and I expected him to), I would not be comfortable doing that. It's less about anyone calling police. It may not be likely, but what if there was an evacuation of the library or some other emergency? My 9 year old does not have a phone and he wouldn't know what to do in that kind of emergency. If I really wanted to go to the back to school night, I would just bring him no matter what the school said about children being allowed. |
| Considering that public school is really just daycare, it’s a bit rich for the school to tell you that you can’t bring the kids along to the teacher interviews. |
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Single mom here and thank goodness our school did it via zoom (and provided recordings and office hours if unable to attend entire presentation) with different time frames for different grades.
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+1. It is not a child care facility. They are not setup to supervise. |
| I have a 9 year old who I leave home for short spurts of time. For back to school night, I just hired a babysitter. |