Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.
Heck, they could have served up caviar for lunch, all paid for by us, American taxpayers. Nice of them to be so generous while making us pay for it. How about one of their super rich elites donate the funds?
Federal workers don’t even get free water at work. Either drink tap water or bring your own water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.
Heck, they could have served up caviar for lunch, all paid for by us, American taxpayers. Nice of them to be so generous while making us pay for it. How about one of their super rich elites donate the funds?
Are you cognitively impaired?
All the activities are educational, and serve to orient kids to the sciences, at a time when the US needs to import thousands of scientists to implement its national security goals (yes, biological, chemical and physical science endeavors are part of our national security).
You're really going to equate luxury food with interesting kids in careers your country needs for the future?
YOU
ARE
SO
STUPID.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.
Heck, they could have served up caviar for lunch, all paid for by us, American taxpayers. Nice of them to be so generous while making us pay for it. How about one of their super rich elites donate the funds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.
Heck, they could have served up caviar for lunch, all paid for by us, American taxpayers. Nice of them to be so generous while making us pay for it. How about one of their super rich elites donate the funds?
Federal workers don’t even get free water at work. Either drink tap water or bring your own water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.
Heck, they could have served up caviar for lunch, all paid for by us, American taxpayers. Nice of them to be so generous while making us pay for it. How about one of their super rich elites donate the funds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.
Heck, they could have served up caviar for lunch, all paid for by us, American taxpayers. Nice of them to be so generous while making us pay for it. How about one of their super rich elites donate the funds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never bring kids to work on that day. If you do that, what does your kid do there while you work assuming 8 hours at office? Doing a tour? Won't they get bored?
I assume parents that work from home do not pull their kids out on this day to observe you working from home.
The NIH has an absolutely GLORIOUS bring your child to work day, with labs opening their doors to present their research and do fun age-appropriate experiments, campus events, movies, petting zoos, etc. My older kid went with my husband to dissect a cow eye, see the Da Vinci surgical robot in action, watch a movie; while I toured the mice facilities with my youngest. Years later, she still remembers the nest of baby mice she saw (she's aware of experiments done to them, obviously).
It's a dream come true for many STEM-minded kids.