Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that people call daycare school because it sounds better and makes them feel like they are doing the right thing for their child.
For what it's worth, daycare is a full day program where parents put their children when they work. The care is usually decent, but the level of teaching is usually pretty low. Even a place like Bright Horizons who tote that they have a preschool is a daycare for all ages. Parents who send their children to a part time (3 hours a day and 2.5 years of age and up) are sending their children to school. The teachers are highly educated and the curriculum is fully thought out.
Wow
You are an idiot
How so?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that people call daycare school because it sounds better and makes them feel like they are doing the right thing for their child.
For what it's worth, daycare is a full day program where parents put their children when they work. The care is usually decent, but the level of teaching is usually pretty low. Even a place like Bright Horizons who tote that they have a preschool is a daycare for all ages. Parents who send their children to a part time (3 hours a day and 2.5 years of age and up) are sending their children to school. The teachers are highly educated and the curriculum is fully thought out.
Wow
You are an idiot
Anonymous wrote:I think that people call daycare school because it sounds better and makes them feel like they are doing the right thing for their child.
For what it's worth, daycare is a full day program where parents put their children when they work. The care is usually decent, but the level of teaching is usually pretty low. Even a place like Bright Horizons who tote that they have a preschool is a daycare for all ages. Parents who send their children to a part time (3 hours a day and 2.5 years of age and up) are sending their children to school. The teachers are highly educated and the curriculum is fully thought out.
Anonymous wrote:Ok this is admittedly a stupid pet peeve. My coworker always refers to her child as going to "school" rather than "daycare." It's a daycare center and the kid is one year old. I get that many daycare providers function as a preschool in the older years, but c'mon. I asked her today if she kept child at home during govt shutdown and she was like "oh no, Suzy loves school soooo much."
But maybe I'm just not with the lingo- do other people refer to daycare as school?
Anonymous wrote:Well I suppose since a lot of teachers now feel they provide a glorified babysitting service.. maybe the two are becoming interchangeable.
