Anonymous wrote:I wish I knew why it was so hard to find. I did this exact job in HS. I did 2x per week for a family, I walked to their house and let myself in, met the girls at the bus stop and hung out with them for 2 hours or so until mom came home. It was great! I made good money for a HS student... Blah blah activities sure, but not all kids are overloaded with activities.
Anonymous wrote:pp, you mean you pay her for 40 hrs a week? Full time means 40 hrs a week
Anonymous wrote:Since most people just bashed you instead of gave actual advice, I’ll do the latter.
I have an after school sitter who picks up my kids at the bus (k,3,grades) every day. She works 2:30-6:30 (through really she’s off by 5:15 most days) and drives the oldest to soccer, where I meet them once a week.
We pay $37/ hr for her full time even when we pick up early (duh). We found her by asking on our neighborhood facebook page. She is a morning nanny and then comes to our house. She’s great but it’s not cheap. We pay so much bc we couldn’t find anyone else. I wanted to lock her in not have her looking for a higher paying job all year and then leave us in a lurch.
Anonymous wrote:I have been doing this for years due to a SN kid. Here is the thing — current high schoolers are INCREDIBLY over scheduled. They pretty much never have time for a regular after school gig. Too much homework, sports, competitive dance, etc.
My demographic is college aged women. This crew has maybe 18 hours of class a week. And they have totally dialed back the activity nonsense. They are the ones with time. And I find them on care. You can sign up for care for just a few months until you find the person that works. You have to email about 15 people to interview three to then find one that sticks with you. For me, it is well worth the investment. My current sitter has been with us 6 years — all through undergrad and now a masters program. We will be very sad when she finishes up this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - yeah, I definitely am NOT looking for some 28 year old with a MA who can drive my giant SUV (which I don't have). I only want a few days because I have a pretty flexible work schedule, working from home many days of the week, but I do need to go in at least once per week and sometimes more. My kid is old enough to just come home and do homework and chill before we go off to several activities later in the evening. I feel like this could definitely work for a HS student. I don't really need them to be able to drive, but that is sort of a "nice to have". I just don't get it, having a routine HS job is like another "activity" said high schooler can put on their college application while making some cash.
Lol, no I meant the parents expect the part time sitter to have the huge new SUV/minivan...like the sitter can afford an $80k car on the $250/week they want to pay her.
I see this all the time. Or they want the sitter to live within 10-15 minutes of them in Kalorama, McLean, or Bethesda....on 3 hours of work per day where a studio is $2200.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - yeah, I definitely am NOT looking for some 28 year old with a MA who can drive my giant SUV (which I don't have). I only want a few days because I have a pretty flexible work schedule, working from home many days of the week, but I do need to go in at least once per week and sometimes more. My kid is old enough to just come home and do homework and chill before we go off to several activities later in the evening. I feel like this could definitely work for a HS student. I don't really need them to be able to drive, but that is sort of a "nice to have". I just don't get it, having a routine HS job is like another "activity" said high schooler can put on their college application while making some cash.
Your last sentence makes no sense.
Re-phrasing / explaining my point: Having a routine high school babysitting job is like (and just as good as) any other activity. The high schooler can put it on their college application just like they can put a sport, participation in music/drama, or other commercial job.
OP, I also think this should be a good job for a HS student, but I wouldn't go in with this as a selling point. Colleges absolutely do not view a regular babysitting job the same way that they view participation in a sport or activity, and HS kids know this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - yeah, I definitely am NOT looking for some 28 year old with a MA who can drive my giant SUV (which I don't have). I only want a few days because I have a pretty flexible work schedule, working from home many days of the week, but I do need to go in at least once per week and sometimes more. My kid is old enough to just come home and do homework and chill before we go off to several activities later in the evening. I feel like this could definitely work for a HS student. I don't really need them to be able to drive, but that is sort of a "nice to have". I just don't get it, having a routine HS job is like another "activity" said high schooler can put on their college application while making some cash.
Lol, no I meant the parents expect the part time sitter to have the huge new SUV/minivan...like the sitter can afford an $80k car on the $250/week they want to pay her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - yeah, I definitely am NOT looking for some 28 year old with a MA who can drive my giant SUV (which I don't have). I only want a few days because I have a pretty flexible work schedule, working from home many days of the week, but I do need to go in at least once per week and sometimes more. My kid is old enough to just come home and do homework and chill before we go off to several activities later in the evening. I feel like this could definitely work for a HS student. I don't really need them to be able to drive, but that is sort of a "nice to have". I just don't get it, having a routine HS job is like another "activity" said high schooler can put on their college application while making some cash.
Your last sentence makes no sense.
Re-phrasing / explaining my point: Having a routine high school babysitting job is like (and just as good as) any other activity. The high schooler can put it on their college application just like they can put a sport, participation in music/drama, or other commercial job.