Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have school for 180 days. A year has 365 days. School is NOT comprehensive childcare the way a nanny or daycare is.
Plan accordingly. Some people keep a nanny, some parents shift to part time, some people use day off camps and grandparents.
Many schools, especially charters, are not in session 180 days per year. They use accounting tricks to inflate the number of days they're open.
Theres 104 weekend days though. Its not like you and husband work all day Saturdays and Sundays.
DC Way, Busy Bees on the hill are the cheapest day off options aside form school aftercare
104+180=312.
So you still have to account for 50 days. Double FT working parents need to do some serious accounting to make this work.
Anonymous wrote:Some daycares allow drop-ins. We continued to be at our old daycare as needed.
Anonymous wrote:I just want to pop in to say that while, yes, this is a pain and a big expense, it’s till not nearly the cost of a full time nanny. Our full time nanny at $32 per hour costs us about $6400 a month all in (taxes, etc). That’s about $77k a year, and she gets 3 weeks PTO you’ve got to cover. Once my kid went to PK3 it became:
Aftercare: $100 a week, or $4000 a year
Summer camp: $600 a week x 8 weeks a year: $4800
WHN fees for 25 random days off: $1500
Nanny cost for 25 random days off: $7200
Now, that’s not zero for sure, but $18k is a LOT less than $77k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have school for 180 days. A year has 365 days. School is NOT comprehensive childcare the way a nanny or daycare is.
Plan accordingly. Some people keep a nanny, some parents shift to part time, some people use day off camps and grandparents.
Many schools, especially charters, are not in session 180 days per year. They use accounting tricks to inflate the number of days they're open.
Theres 104 weekend days though. Its not like you and husband work all day Saturdays and Sundays.
DC Way, Busy Bees on the hill are the cheapest day off options aside form school aftercare
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have school for 180 days. A year has 365 days. School is NOT comprehensive childcare the way a nanny or daycare is.
Plan accordingly. Some people keep a nanny, some parents shift to part time, some people use day off camps and grandparents.
Many schools, especially charters, are not in session 180 days per year. They use accounting tricks to inflate the number of days they're open.
Anonymous wrote:They have school for 180 days. A year has 365 days. School is NOT comprehensive childcare the way a nanny or daycare is.
Plan accordingly. Some people keep a nanny, some parents shift to part time, some people use day off camps and grandparents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello fellow parents. I am looking for inputs from parents where both has/have demanding careers.
Our child is going to go to school PK3 this fall in DC, public for now and we will revisit at PK4+.
I am shocked at the days the school is closed plus all the holidays. We were thinking about using school aftercare untill we can pick our child up.
How did you plan for this? I am so shocked and looking for inputs from other parents so I can plan proactively.
Thank you
Yeah umm I dont know what to say besides if you dont have lots of money or family/grandparents then you dont take a vacation for a few years because all of your leave will go to sick days and days off.
Yes, aftercare can be utilized. It will cover some days but there's a wide range in programming (thats my nicest way of putting it).
What have you been doing prior to this? Daycare or nanny?
We have a nanny. This is eye opening as a FTP.
Debating if we should keep a nanny for after care so we can use her wreb school closes