It's very disconcerting, to say the least. When I go on field trips with my son's day care, the staff must count the kids 6-7 times throughout the trip. Before leaving, on the bus, as they get off the bus (no stragglers), at lunch, when they board the bus, when they exit the bus to go back into the center. It feels like overkill. But obviously it isn't. Might be a protocol this day care should put in place, if it doesn't already have it.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know, leaving the kid at the park is certainly horrible, but remember that WaPo story about parents who left their kids strapped in carseats? I don't know that we can take it to mean that the place is a terrible daycare or that the teachers are terrible teachers, but it certainly is a reminder that people can have some really, really bad screw ups that have really serious consequences when taking care of little kids.
Anonymous wrote:Horrifying and scary story, but the reactions here are over the top. Would it help to close the center, putting how many caregivers out of work and forcing all the parents to make alternate arrangements? Daycare is hard enough to find in this city.
The bottom line is that the child was recovered without injury, although only by luck. I would be beyond outraged if I were the parents. But if I were the administration of the center, I would use this as a wake up call. What procedures could have prevented this from happening? The employees now have the potential consequences burned on their brains. Use the incident to make sure there's never a second incident.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This story is horrifying and my reaction is THANK GOD that my DH and I can afford to live on one income (even though things are very tight) so that I can stay home while my kids are young.
I'm the PP who posted this (above) and I'm sorry. I see now that it was insensitive. It was the first thing that came to my mind while I was reading this horrible story. I shouldn't have posted it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious,
I have never heard such a thing as a daycare taking young children off property to places like public parks. It seems like a dangerous liability.
Is this a DC thing?
Very common when the day care does not have its own playground. Where are you from?
All over the country (military). Currently in NOVA. Never, ever heard of such a thing. Ridiculous and dangerous, given the ages of the kids.
Then go onto a Virgina site for posting, it's common in DC, and DC Urban posters understand that.
This is a daycare/preschool forum, not the DC schools forum. This website is for the entire DC metro area, which includes NOVA and Maryland.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone at FCC know how the kid is doing? Hope everyone is okay!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PS: To those who don't know whether FCC is a daycare or a preschool: the Western Ave. building is a preschool. I know this because my daughter left there knowing how to read. Not sure "daycare" focuses on reading, math, geography, and science, but FCC does.
Why on earth would that make it not a daycare? I really don't get this. My son is in daycare, and they focus on all of these things. It's a daycare because it is an all-day program. Preschools are not all day programs.
Yes. I don't understand why the first poster is so loathe to call a daycare what it is. FCC is a daycare- it is an all day program primarily used so parents can work. Prior to this incident, I have always heard good things about FCC.
PP here (the P.S. poster) I was just warning the poster that said the FCC was a preschool that it would not be called a preschool by posters such as you lovely ladies. That's all. My child goes to an all-day daycare and I am fine with it. But I have been on many threads were people get really really angry that you would call a program a day care a preschool.