You must not know DC. Many families don't have cars, and their kids metro or bus everywhere. Where we live, it's quicker to metro to the zoo than to a Petsmart. |
Ok, but this thread concerns preschool trips and preschools generally have kids between 3-5. Why you assumed I was talking about a three year old when neither my post (nor the one I responded to) mentioned age at all is unclear. |
| I'm a New Yorker who takes city buses and subways daily and I would not let my 3 yo on a field trip to the subway with 1:4 ratio. No way. Too much that can go wrong on a crowded platform and subway. My DC's preschool would never try it. They only do city buses with 1:2 and that I'm good with. |
OP is talking about 3 year olds. It's fair to assume that others are talking about 3 year olds. You can chime in about your 5 year old kid, but it's not as relevant because, as PP pointed out, there's a huge difference between 3 and 5. |
+1 There are little kids on metro every day. Little ones whose parents bring them to daycare every day. Entire classes of kids going on field trips or going to events downtown. This isn't that hard unless you've never been on metro yourself, in which case, yes, you may not want to try metro for the first time with a class of preschoolers. |
I think we're just going in circles now and enhancing the aforementioned vibe. Let me be clear - My point was not that taking metro to the zoo is difficult. I still metro to the zoo rather than pay for parking! My point was that the wow factor for Petsmart was the same as the wow factor for the zoo *at that age*. I'm talking about taking 3 year olds to a place with limited bathroom options and at a ratio that exceeds the number of hands one person has. Is it so hard to imagine a situation where there are 5 minutes until the next train (with the following one arriving 30 minutes later due to track work), and one of the kids says "I have to poop NOW," and some poor teacher has to haul three kids to the metro bathroom (if there is even one in service) and take care of business before the train arrives or risk delaying the whole group 30 more minutes? I'm not saying metro is bad! I'm not saying it's not safe! I'm not saying this can't be done! I'm saying that at three years old, it seems like more effort than it's worth at a 3:1 ratio. But since it's already planned, I'm encouraging OP to be a part of it so she can enjoy the trip with her child while also helping the teachers. |
This is a dumb debate even by DCUM standards, but it is Friday so I will play along. OP may be dealing with 3 year olds, but the post concerns preschool age and plenty of other people posted about experiences with older preschoolers. And my post indicated that friends of my 5 year old, who are 4, were equally into the trip and would be equally upset at being forced to miss it by her paranoid mom. Finally, I said even my 3 year old was aware of the trip and felt like she was missing out, and it wasn't even her class going. Imagine how upset of it were her class and friends going and her mom said no. So, no I don't agree with you, either that my post was irrelevant or that you could cavalierly withhold a 3 year old from a trip without a severely disappointing said 3 year old. |
Imagine the disappointment when she is told she can't have her own cell phone at age 7 like all her friends. Sooooo sad. It's called parenting. |
Right. And parenting is often about making good choices for your kids. Denying them a cell phone is a good choice. Denying them a fun and safe field trip is a bad choice. |
The OP is about 3 year olds. But thanks for playing. |
It's not dumb. In terms of safety and management, there's a big difference between a class of 3 year olds and a class of 5 year olds. Obviously. I wouldn't give a field trip with my 5 year old a second thought. 3 year old (or even 2s sometimes) is a whole different story. |
There is a big difference between 3 and 5 year olds but the underlying activity is so safe that it really doensn't matter. And I'm not sure 5 is safer anyhow - my kids at 5 were much more likely to run off while my 3 year old was much more likely to cling tightly to my hand. |
Imagine a DCUM thread, 4+ pages in, veering ever so slightly from the OP's specific fact pattern. Unheard of! If I had responded about my 3rd grader's field trip, your complaints would be warranted. But discussing 5 year olds (and 4 and 3 year olds, you conveniently ignore) is more than on point for a discussion of preschools. |
Now we're passing blatant judgment on other peoples' parenting decisions? Take it to the general parenting forum, no one asked for your opinion here. |