Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do daily aftercare or get a PT sitter. Your kids are too young to wing it. Trust me: going from a FT nanny to zero care is not going to work and isn’t fair to your kids. When your younger kid is in 4th grade, yes, your plan will work.
Thanks, yes, I am worried that they're too young. It's not like they can come home from school and do their homework with no assistance. Plus, they currently do some after-school activities that are not at school, so we'd have to figure out how to handle those. One they want to quit anyway and they other than can start doing at school next year (it's only offered for 1st grade and up). The other I take them to because I also do it.
Anonymous wrote:I think aftercare at school will be more reliable and easier than finding a PT sitter. Look at all the threads on this board about how impossible it is to find PT sitters.
Anonymous wrote:Do your kids take the bus and when does the bus get to your stop?
I don't do aftercare because the bus doesn't get to my stop until after 4:30 and I flex my schedule to leave at 4 and I work 15 minutes away (and know other parents at the same bus stop).
Anonymous wrote:I mean, most parents do this. Aftercare. Kids love it.
Anonymous wrote:Do daily aftercare or get a PT sitter. Your kids are too young to wing it. Trust me: going from a FT nanny to zero care is not going to work and isn’t fair to your kids. When your younger kid is in 4th grade, yes, your plan will work.
Anonymous wrote:We faced this decision and ended up hiring a nanny/housekeeper once our kids were in school full-time.
She does all of the errands, groceries, etc... and also cleans the house for us. It's a huge indulgence/luxury but it's also a lifesaver on days when a kid is sick or a parent is travelling.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, most parents do this. Aftercare. Kids love it.