Anonymous wrote:So there’s a few things going on:
- you definitely should get your nanny to fill in one of those recommendations as she has been with your child the longest. There should be an area in your statements that you can explain she has been his longest caregiver.
- in general these schools like to see that the child has already been socialized in some kind of group setting. That could have been your daycare if not for his hard transition. Be sure to mention any playgroups or other group settings. Or lessons that your child has done that your nanny has taken him to.
- it’s been only two months in daycare, aren’t the recommendations due by Feb? I would talk to the daycare teachers about your intent to apply and how to work with them to have the best recommendation. Hard, yes if he is the “difficult” kid it’s a ding. But since it’s Feb hopefully time for improvement.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Ravenna schools requires disclosure and teacher/caregiver confidential letters. If you fail to disclose, then you will not get accepted based on your failure to disclose. All children have transitional issues. Don’t worry your child’s current teachers aren’t going to “trash” him/her/they.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids’ preK-12th grade school required letters on behalf of my then 3 year old. I think this is very typical, PPs.
OP I would get a letter from the nanny as well.
This is not very typical. I can only guess that the reason they want a "letter of recommendation" for a child is to ascertain the pedigree of the family. That's the only thing that makes sense here. What could a note like that possibly say? "Larlo is a great napper and can count to 20." "Larlo inherited his intellect from his father, who runs a successful consulting business serving Fortune 500 companies."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids’ preK-12th grade school required letters on behalf of my then 3 year old. I think this is very typical, PPs.
OP I would get a letter from the nanny as well.
This is not very typical. I can only guess that the reason they want a "letter of recommendation" for a child is to ascertain the pedigree of the family. That's the only thing that makes sense here. What could a note like that possibly say? "Larlo is a great napper and can count to 20." "Larlo inherited his intellect from his father, who runs a successful consulting business serving Fortune 500 companies."
Anonymous wrote:Why are you applying at “ selective” preschools? What does that even mean?
Anonymous wrote:My kids’ preK-12th grade school required letters on behalf of my then 3 year old. I think this is very typical, PPs.
OP I would get a letter from the nanny as well.
Anonymous wrote:My kids’ preK-12th grade school required letters on behalf of my then 3 year old. I think this is very typical, PPs.
OP I would get a letter from the nanny as well.
Anonymous wrote:A letter of recommendation for a toddler?! That's insane. Find a normal preschool for your child.