Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you who don't understand: OP is just asking if your kids were happy in daycare at ages 3-5.
Like a Bright Horizons that says it has a "preschool curriculum" for their older classes. As opposed to "Joe Smith's Preschool" that starts at age 2.5, is NAEYC accredited, and doesn't have an infant program.
OP here. THIS. Exactly. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are 3 & 5. My oldest went to Bright Horizons until he turned 3. We switched to a play-based Reggio program with extended hours and a year-round schedule because it was cheaper and a better location. My child was equally happy as his friends who stayed at BH. They did a lot more kindergarten type activities like worksheets and writing their names. Half-way into Kindergarten we see the same group of families fairly often and the kids seem to be equally happy and well prepared for kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:For those of you who don't understand: OP is just asking if your kids were happy in daycare at ages 3-5.
Like a Bright Horizons that says it has a "preschool curriculum" for their older classes. As opposed to "Joe Smith's Preschool" that starts at age 2.5, is NAEYC accredited, and doesn't have an infant program.
Anonymous wrote:That was the age ours became remarkably unhappy at daycare when he seemed happy enough before. We pulled him out and put him in a regular preschool, and he was much happier. No regrets.
Anonymous wrote:That was the age ours became remarkably unhappy at daycare when he seemed happy enough before. We pulled him out and put him in a regular preschool, and he was much happier. No regrets.
Anonymous wrote:Not a troll. Trying to figure out if kids are as happy at daycare preschools as they are at stand alone preschools. We do need full-time care and summers.