Anonymous wrote:Meal time strapping is fine, op. I do not understand their nap time issues. In my home daycare, all under 3yrs are in pack n plays, makes nap time a breeze. They have 6 kids for 2 adults though, not 8 or 12, and only babies get rocked occasionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They keep some kids strapped to a chair if they won’t stay in their cot. Those kids wait in the chair while other kids get lulled to sleep. When it’s their “turn” to get lulled to sleep they get removed from the chair.
This is not normal or okay.
How do you propose they do nap time when several kids won’t stay in their cot and disrupting the kids who are willing to stay in their cot and are sleeping?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it standard practice at daycare for toddlers 2-3 year old to be strapped to a toddler chair with a seatbelt? The daycare I toured do this for circle time, meal time, and nap time or anytime they need to contain the child. They do this with children who do not stay seated. They said it teaches younger toddlers to stay seated.
These are the type of chairs they use
https://www.lakeshorelearning.com/products/ca/p/AA357/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=ppc&utm_campaign=performancemaxnonhighaov&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQjw6uWyBhD1ARIsAIMcADrhPjBSI3zlDBnPuoqUlzTWpB_3Zbq674d9Wr0NTeCNS9CGoXxzM1IaAvdxEALw_wcB
In MD or DC it's a huge licensing violation, kids can only be restrained for safety. So, you can buckle them into a high chair, or into the stroller when you go for a walk. But otherwise restraining isn't allowed.
Even if a parent is OK with it, you have to wonder what else staff members who are willing to overlook this, are willing to overlook.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No it's not okay.
I have the opposite problem. My daycare lets kids run around nonstop during meal times. WHY?! My 2.5 year old happily sat during all meals, started daycare and now we fight nonstop with her at every meal. When daycare loses control of several kids, the others all follow suit like little ducks and now none of them stay seated. I think a lot of it is teacher training. They need to work with those kids who don't stay seated. But kids should only have to sit for meals. Reading and circle time should be sitting on carpets. And all other times should be free motion.
How are teachers able to stop one kid who refuse to stay in her cot from running around disrupting other kids who are sleeping or trying to sleep? The ratio is 1:8. Seems like an impossible task. The teacher can try to teach the child but it can take weeks before the child learns what’s expected of her.
Where is a 1:8 ratio legal for kids this age?
MD is 1:3 until they turn 2. Then it's 1:6, but by that point you have kids moving up from toddlers who already know how to lie on a cot, so at most you have one new kid at a time who needs help.
The kids learn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No it's not okay.
I have the opposite problem. My daycare lets kids run around nonstop during meal times. WHY?! My 2.5 year old happily sat during all meals, started daycare and now we fight nonstop with her at every meal. When daycare loses control of several kids, the others all follow suit like little ducks and now none of them stay seated. I think a lot of it is teacher training. They need to work with those kids who don't stay seated. But kids should only have to sit for meals. Reading and circle time should be sitting on carpets. And all other times should be free motion.
How are teachers able to stop one kid who refuse to stay in her cot from running around disrupting other kids who are sleeping or trying to sleep? The ratio is 1:8. Seems like an impossible task. The teacher can try to teach the child but it can take weeks before the child learns what’s expected of her.
Anonymous wrote:Is it standard practice at daycare for toddlers 2-3 year old to be strapped to a toddler chair with a seatbelt? The daycare I toured do this for circle time, meal time, and nap time or anytime they need to contain the child. They do this with children who do not stay seated. They said it teaches younger toddlers to stay seated.
These are the type of chairs they use
https://www.lakeshorelearning.com/products/ca/p/AA357/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=ppc&utm_campaign=performancemaxnonhighaov&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQjw6uWyBhD1ARIsAIMcADrhPjBSI3zlDBnPuoqUlzTWpB_3Zbq674d9Wr0NTeCNS9CGoXxzM1IaAvdxEALw_wcB
.Anonymous wrote:I think millions of parents strapped their children into high chairs to eat, and to keep them safe while the parents perform x task. I’m not saying this is common with daycares but it’s certainly not tying children to chairs, and in my opinion not a “call licensing” issue.