Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia doesn’t require them now.
MoCo will probably require them in the fall. My child’s speech therapist is booked solid and has a long waitlist from all the new speech issues caused by masking around kids this young, so you have good instincts.
Even in MoCo, there are a number of in-home daycares that never required them for the kids. I think that would be your best bet because I agree with others that there is no offramp in center environments.
How have they gotten away with this? I thought the county required masks in childcare settings for 2 and up. Is licensing just turning a blind eye during inspections? Just curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia doesn’t require them now.
MoCo will probably require them in the fall. My child’s speech therapist is booked solid and has a long waitlist from all the new speech issues caused by masking around kids this young, so you have good instincts.
Even in MoCo, there are a number of in-home daycares that never required them for the kids. I think that would be your best bet because I agree with others that there is no offramp in center environments.
Anonymous wrote:I could see them going away, but having different quarantine requirements for exposures based on whether your kid was vaccinated or wearing a mask.
If you're that worried why not hire a nanny? With 2 other kids it would probably be more cost effective to have a nanny for the 2 year old that also watched the older kids in the afternoon than to pay for 2 lots of aftercare?
For what its worth, my kid is 2 and has been in part time preschool masked this year. She is speaking in full sentences and has a large vocabulary. From talking with the other parents in her class / age group no one is seeing a language delay in their kids either. (Small sample I know). I think if your kid is going to have a language delay its going to happen regardless of Covid. Its probably only a very small number of kids for whom Covid is making a significant difference with respect to language acquisition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia doesn’t require them now.
MoCo will probably require them in the fall. My child’s speech therapist is booked solid and has a long waitlist from all the new speech issues caused by masking around kids this young, so you have good instincts.
Even in MoCo, there are a number of in-home daycares that never required them for the kids. I think that would be your best bet because I agree with others that there is no offramp in center environments.
Anonymous wrote:I could see them going away, but having different quarantine requirements for exposures based on whether your kid was vaccinated or wearing a mask.
If you're that worried why not hire a nanny? With 2 other kids it would probably be more cost effective to have a nanny for the 2 year old that also watched the older kids in the afternoon than to pay for 2 lots of aftercare?
For what its worth, my kid is 2 and has been in part time preschool masked this year. She is speaking in full sentences and has a large vocabulary. From talking with the other parents in her class / age group no one is seeing a language delay in their kids either. (Small sample I know). I think if your kid is going to have a language delay its going to happen regardless of Covid. Its probably only a very small number of kids for whom Covid is making a significant difference with respect to language acquisition.