Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hush OP, this is our kids' version of the 70s free range childhood. They'll be fine.
Those kids are really wild and often hurt the toddlers playing there.
Peabody also has their own beautiful playground that they don't open to the public, which makes it especially obnoxious that they farm their out of control aftercare out to Stanton.
Why don't they use their own playground (serious question)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hush OP, this is our kids' version of the 70s free range childhood. They'll be fine.
Those kids are really wild and often hurt the toddlers playing there.
Peabody also has their own beautiful playground that they don't open to the public, which makes it especially obnoxious that they farm their out of control aftercare out to Stanton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hush OP, this is our kids' version of the 70s free range childhood. They'll be fine.
Those kids are really wild and often hurt the toddlers playing there.
Peabody also has their own beautiful playground that they don't open to the public, which makes it especially obnoxious that they farm their out of control aftercare out to Stanton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hush OP, this is our kids' version of the 70s free range childhood. They'll be fine.
Those kids are really wild and often hurt the toddlers playing there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hush OP, this is our kids' version of the 70s free range childhood. They'll be fine.
Those kids are really wild and often hurt the toddlers playing there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hush OP, this is our kids' version of the 70s free range childhood. They'll be fine.
Those kids are really wild and often hurt the toddlers playing there.
Anonymous wrote:Hush OP, this is our kids' version of the 70s free range childhood. They'll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:
This is a public park that they're using for private aftercare. I am all for older kids getting to use the playground. But the least they could do is hire enough staff to adequately watch the kids.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is that the only people who see this are the parents who do not have their kids in Peabody aftercare! We just leave the playground area when they arrive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been at Stanton Park a few times since school started, and I have been pretty appalled by the lack of supervision of the kids in Peabody's aftercare. I thought parents would want to know. There are easily 40 Peabody children on the playground (they all arrive in groups which is how I know) and very few adults supervising. The adults don't see a lot of stuff (I witnessed several incidents today with no adult in sight) and don't seem to even know which kids they are supposed to be watching. I watched them scold a kid today who isn't even in aftercare at Peabody (and who didn't do anything wrong). It is incredibly chaotic, and with so little supervision, a child could easily get hurt (a kid got hit by another kid today, a kid was chasing another kid with a stick - nobody noticed) or wander away. And before anyone jumps on me as being a toddler parent, I have older kids. But yes, several toddlers got mowed down.
This is a public park that they're using for private aftercare. I am all for older kids getting to use the playground. But the least they could do is hire enough staff to adequately watch the kids.
This has been going on for 10+ years.
Anonymous wrote:I have been at Stanton Park a few times since school started, and I have been pretty appalled by the lack of supervision of the kids in Peabody's aftercare. I thought parents would want to know. There are easily 40 Peabody children on the playground (they all arrive in groups which is how I know) and very few adults supervising. The adults don't see a lot of stuff (I witnessed several incidents today with no adult in sight) and don't seem to even know which kids they are supposed to be watching. I watched them scold a kid today who isn't even in aftercare at Peabody (and who didn't do anything wrong). It is incredibly chaotic, and with so little supervision, a child could easily get hurt (a kid got hit by another kid today, a kid was chasing another kid with a stick - nobody noticed) or wander away. And before anyone jumps on me as being a toddler parent, I have older kids. But yes, several toddlers got mowed down.
This is a public park that they're using for private aftercare. I am all for older kids getting to use the playground. But the least they could do is hire enough staff to adequately watch the kids.