Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a State licensing violation under proper discipline and child safety since the child is being restrained due to behavior. Also can be interpreted as abusive by some inspectors and they may refer to CPS. The result will be a violation on their record and they will stop the practice. Another solution to get them to stop the practice is to have a conversation with them. They may not understand how bad this practice truly is and a conversation may be helpful.
News Flash:
Parents use “mechanical restraints” with their children every day. It starts with mechanical swings and then progresses to walkers, now known as entertainment centers, so there’s no more walking allowed.
What children need is a safe floor space to move around. But almost everyone has a dog, so parents resort to whatever is most convenient for them.
Anonymous wrote:This is a State licensing violation under proper discipline and child safety since the child is being restrained due to behavior. Also can be interpreted as abusive by some inspectors and they may refer to CPS. The result will be a violation on their record and they will stop the practice. Another solution to get them to stop the practice is to have a conversation with them. They may not understand how bad this practice truly is and a conversation may be helpful.
Anonymous wrote:[I'll start off by saying we are moving to a different daycare very soon and have a start date.]
This center is run by a family and has been open for more than a decade. I know it is their sole source of income, and I would not feel good about causing an exodus from this daycare. On the other hand, I think this practice should stop immediately.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes it is done for a child own safety. As long as it is for a few minutes only, I would be fine with that. Like 3-4 min.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a parent. I put both my kids in center-based daycare from 6 months to K.
You describe your kids as happy with the center and the owners as caring.
It seems they are using the kindervan as a time out chair.
Your kids seem to be aware that naughty kids are sanctioned using this chair.
My daycare had a time out chair on the ground with no belt for 3-4s.
If your kids do not seem traumatized by this, then I would take it up with the owners directly. Ask them to put an unbelted time out chair in, instead
For me, I had bigger issues with momentary inattention. I once arrived in an infant classroom to find my kid sitting in a Bumbo and nobody in the room at all. The young aide had gone to the restroom. While that's a call a mom might make, I didn't expect it from a daycare with multiple teachers. My older kid was also left unattended at age 3 while a teacher went to answer a phone, and during that time, he ran around the classroom and fell and smashed his teeth on a table.
So...the situation you're complaining about at least seems more safety minded.
I would talk to the center first. Because your kids don't seem to be harmed. It might only be one of the staff doing it.
Anonymous wrote:This is a State licensing violation under proper discipline and child safety since the child is being restrained due to behavior. Also can be interpreted as abusive by some inspectors and they may refer to CPS. The result will be a violation on their record and they will stop the practice. Another solution to get them to stop the practice is to have a conversation with them. They may not understand how bad this practice truly is and a conversation may be helpful.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a parent. I put both my kids in center-based daycare from 6 months to K.
You describe your kids as happy with the center and the owners as caring.
It seems they are using the kindervan as a time out chair.
Your kids seem to be aware that naughty kids are sanctioned using this chair.
My daycare had a time out chair on the ground with no belt for 3-4s.
If your kids do not seem traumatized by this, then I would take it up with the owners directly. Ask them to put an unbelted time out chair in, instead
For me, I had bigger issues with momentary inattention. I once arrived in an infant classroom to find my kid sitting in a Bumbo and nobody in the room at all. The young aide had gone to the restroom. While that's a call a mom might make, I didn't expect it from a daycare with multiple teachers. My older kid was also left unattended at age 3 while a teacher went to answer a phone, and during that time, he ran around the classroom and fell and smashed his teeth on a table.
So...the situation you're complaining about at least seems more safety minded.
I would talk to the center first. Because your kids don't seem to be harmed. It might only be one of the staff doing it.
Anonymous wrote:Call your state licensing department and ask. File an anonymous report if you have to and they'll send someone randomly to check.