Anonymous wrote:You certainly seem to a lot of time on your hands to start threads here, OP. Do you even work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WFH doesn't mean SAHP.
Arrange childcare when you go out for the day and your WFH partner is working.
WFH doesn't absolve you of being a parent. Why should the partner be the one arranging childcare, why shouldn't the WFH parent arrange their own childcare?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This again?
+1
OP this is not pervasive. Do you have a particular example you want to discuss rather than acting like it's the norm?
DP here. At my ES it is. Pickup is at 2:15 and the vast majority of parents there are going home to keep “working” with their kindergartner at home. The amount of kids in aftercare at our school is about half of pre Covid.
Thank goodness for it. We were able to get off the waitlist this year!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This again?
+1
OP this is not pervasive. Do you have a particular example you want to discuss rather than acting like it's the norm?
DP here. At my ES it is. Pickup is at 2:15 and the vast majority of parents there are going home to keep “working” with their kindergartner at home. The amount of kids in aftercare at our school is about half of pre Covid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This again?
+1
OP this is not pervasive. Do you have a particular example you want to discuss rather than acting like it's the norm?
DP here. At my ES it is. Pickup is at 2:15 and the vast majority of parents there are going home to keep “working” with their kindergartner at home. The amount of kids in aftercare at our school is about half of pre Covid.
The majority of parents at your ES have kindergarteners?
I know plenty of parents who have flex schedules, so one parent can be available after school. That doesn't mean that they're doing what OP is accusing them of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This again?
+1
OP this is not pervasive. Do you have a particular example you want to discuss rather than acting like it's the norm?
DP here. At my ES it is. Pickup is at 2:15 and the vast majority of parents there are going home to keep “working” with their kindergartner at home. The amount of kids in aftercare at our school is about half of pre Covid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This again?
+1
OP this is not pervasive. Do you have a particular example you want to discuss rather than acting like it's the norm?
Anonymous wrote:WFH doesn't mean SAHP.
Arrange childcare when you go out for the day and your WFH partner is working.