Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I was actually wondering the same thing. Our baby/toddler just dropped their morning nap and now the nanny is asking if we mind if they go to the park in the morning until nap time and then after nap as well. Our kid just likes to play in the mulch or with toys we bring from home-not much play equipment at the park for them at this young age. I get it, the park is easy. There is also the adult social aspect. But it seems like some structured play is needed too and that I pay too much for something a 16 year old could do.
What sort of structured play for a baby/toddler?
The adult should be interacting with the child. Reading books, singing songs together, learning sign language, taking a class together, doing art projects even if just play doh or finger paints.
If you want a nanny to do all of those things, you need to send your child to daycare.
As a SAHM, I find many parents who employ a nanny to have wildly unrealistic expectations about what a nanny will be doing from day to day with children that are younger than preschool age. The nanny shouldn’t be responsible for teaching your child sign language.
If you want the nanny to take your child to classes, you set that up. It’s not on the nanny to come up with the enrichment activities that you think your child should have. You as the parent come up with that stuff; register for it and give the nanny the schedule.