Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Current infant room parent and I would not recommend it. The ratio is 1:4 which is the minimum required by licensing so it's not great for individual attention and many centers have better ratios, like 1:3. Also there are 16 babies in each room which I feel is too many. Many centers have smaller infant rooms--this is the biggest I have seen. It's very loud and our son naps poorly, if at all. There is a rotating cast of teachers in the room and the babies basically spend most of their days in chairs and there is very little done to stimulate their development beyond diapering and bottle feeding. They are supported to take them out for a walk 2x a day when it's warm but this doesn't seem to happen very often. I am considering pulling DS for a nanny.
Former infant room parent that had concerns similar to the above poster, plus some inconsistent feeding and diapering that convinced me to pull my child. Would not recommend.
I'm the PP and yes, I agree. They let DS go five hours without a bottle and every time I shown up he is sitting in the same chair. Several times he's been in very full diapers or just awake and alone in the crib. It's pretty upsetting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Current infant room parent and I would not recommend it. The ratio is 1:4 which is the minimum required by licensing so it's not great for individual attention and many centers have better ratios, like 1:3. Also there are 16 babies in each room which I feel is too many. Many centers have smaller infant rooms--this is the biggest I have seen. It's very loud and our son naps poorly, if at all. There is a rotating cast of teachers in the room and the babies basically spend most of their days in chairs and there is very little done to stimulate their development beyond diapering and bottle feeding. They are supported to take them out for a walk 2x a day when it's warm but this doesn't seem to happen very often. I am considering pulling DS for a nanny.
Former infant room parent that had concerns similar to the above poster, plus some inconsistent feeding and diapering that convinced me to pull my child. Would not recommend.
Anonymous wrote:Current infant room parent and I would not recommend it. The ratio is 1:4 which is the minimum required by licensing so it's not great for individual attention and many centers have better ratios, like 1:3. Also there are 16 babies in each room which I feel is too many. Many centers have smaller infant rooms--this is the biggest I have seen. It's very loud and our son naps poorly, if at all. There is a rotating cast of teachers in the room and the babies basically spend most of their days in chairs and there is very little done to stimulate their development beyond diapering and bottle feeding. They are supported to take them out for a walk 2x a day when it's warm but this doesn't seem to happen very often. I am considering pulling DS for a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Current parent of an child in the infant room and we have been at the center since the new location opened. There are 3 infant rooms at the center and there are four caregivers and 11 babies in my child's room -and two kids are transitioning to the next age level room in a week.
We've found the staff to be lovely, warm, and responsive. We've been very happy with SAECC so far -- the administration is admittedly all over the place,but my child has thrived.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks - the napping was a concern I had after visiting given there are 6-8 infants in one large room. Appreciate the feedback!
Anonymous wrote:Thanks - the napping was a concern I had after visiting given there are 6-8 infants in one large room. Appreciate the feedback!