Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fully potty trained means being able to manage their own clothes and wipe. With that said, most daycares still help but some preschools won't.
Did you just come on to be a jerk? One year olds can't manage their own clothes or wipe.
And clearly this is a daycare. Preschool is for older kids.
Anonymous wrote:Fully potty trained means being able to manage their own clothes and wipe. With that said, most daycares still help but some preschools won't.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks! I didn't want to come off as high maintenance or start off on the wrong foot. I honestly hadn't even thought about it until I received the supply list and diapers were listed.
I'll likely send her in pull ups to start until she's comfortable asking them to go potty and I know there won't be accidents.
Glad I pushed for the 2's room as she was scheduled for the 18m room until the 2's had spots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue is really the availability of a potty.
At many daycares, rooms for kids under 2 don't have bathrooms in them, so a child that age who needed to go, whether or not they needed help, would need an adult to leave the classroom with them, taking them out of ratio.
And at some daycares, that isn't an issue. It's likely to come down to room arrangement.
Helping with clothes etc . . . isn't gong to be a problem.
OP here. Things like this were what I was wondering. My older kids started at Pre-K at this school.
When do daycares normally start potty training?
I'm actually not totally opposed to her wearing diapers at school. A lot of kids can change between diapers in one place and know they need to not pee the underwear at home. One of my kids absolutely wouldn't have ever worn diapers again, though. She would have demanded a potty.
Anonymous wrote:The issue is really the availability of a potty.
At many daycares, rooms for kids under 2 don't have bathrooms in them, so a child that age who needed to go, whether or not they needed help, would need an adult to leave the classroom with them, taking them out of ratio.
And at some daycares, that isn't an issue. It's likely to come down to room arrangement.
Helping with clothes etc . . . isn't gong to be a problem.