Anonymous wrote:I know sounds strange. My daughter graduated college and already has a high paying job in Tech starting Aug 1. Her and some of her friends are doing nanny stuff for extra money.
I noticed she got more offer more this year as 21, college graduate, she has a car. She did camp counselor work in HS and baby sitting.
But I seem to notice given her home address (my house) is a rich block, weirdly she put it up on line and two pretty rich sets of families contacted her.
Is there a reason rich people want well off nannies?
Is it like the English Butler or French Maid thing? Why pay more someone making peanut butter sandwiches and pushing a swing?
Anonymous wrote:Rich people want nannies with college degrees who speak well and read well in English. Your daughter’s parents’ zip code doesn’t matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is. The upside is that she's highly educated and she has taught DD excellent manners, so that's enough upside for us to keep her around. She is also very opinionated about how to educate young children (and her opinions don't line up with ours), and we like that she cares so much. The downside is she'll NEVER work overtime and asks for a lot of vacation every year (like she's taking this summer off to go visit family in Europe, so I had to find a college student to help out) and she's started insisting on bringing her dog to work even though we're not dog people. Yet, I can't bring myself to let her go...
She sounds immature and spoiled and your kids will end up the same way if you keep her around.
Anonymous wrote:Mine is. The upside is that she's highly educated and she has taught DD excellent manners, so that's enough upside for us to keep her around. She is also very opinionated about how to educate young children (and her opinions don't line up with ours), and we like that she cares so much. The downside is she'll NEVER work overtime and asks for a lot of vacation every year (like she's taking this summer off to go visit family in Europe, so I had to find a college student to help out) and she's started insisting on bringing her dog to work even though we're not dog people. Yet, I can't bring myself to let her go...
Anonymous wrote:Mine is. The upside is that she's highly educated and she has taught DD excellent manners, so that's enough upside for us to keep her around. She is also very opinionated about how to educate young children (and her opinions don't line up with ours), and we like that she cares so much. The downside is she'll NEVER work overtime and asks for a lot of vacation every year (like she's taking this summer off to go visit family in Europe, so I had to find a college student to help out) and she's started insisting on bringing her dog to work even though we're not dog people. Yet, I can't bring myself to let her go...