Anonymous wrote:Falls church PP - would love to know if your place has any openings! Weve been looking for an inhome daycare nearby.
Anonymous wrote:In the District, I paid 1625 for an infant in 2011 at an NAEYC center (large center, but not a chain). I think parents in our infant room pay 1750 now.
Some of the price discrepancies are salaries, but some also stem from rent. Federal centers don't have to pay as much in rent, and centers in church buildings may not be paying market rate either. If your center is in an office space, however, it's competing against private sector tenants for the space.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda about 1/2 mile outside the beltway (does this count?) we pay $1,475.00 per month at a center.
Where is this?
Bright Eyes off of Tuckerman Lane in N. Bethesda. The care givers are very warm and caring. My baby really seems loves them.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I am asking bc I honestly don't have any idea what this costs. We can afford $2k but I also don't think more expensive necessarily means better. But the question is really just to gauge the range and what is typical. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of care do you want?
Custodial care or real care?
Caregivers who hate their job, or
Caregivers who love their work?
What does this even mean?
If you take the time to observe, your see how most of those poor babies get treated. Even if it costs 2K a month. Your baby needs to be loved. Not just diaper-changed every two hours, and then left alone.
So let's recap. You have nothing to contribute to OP's question but you stand in judgement. Not okay.
Let's recap. When you ask for the price of a service, we need to know the level of service you want/can afford. Do you want to find your child at the end of the day happy, well-rested, and ready to go home for dinner and bed? Or passive/angry, over-stimulated, and disagreeable?
Quality of care is of vital importance, imo.
So you're saying no one should dare to even question what the range of rates are for day care?
Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda about 1/2 mile outside the beltway (does this count?) we pay $1,475.00 per month at a center.
Where is this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I paid $350 a week for in-home on Capitol Hill.
How many hours a day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of care do you want?
Custodial care or real care?
Caregivers who hate their job, or
Caregivers who love their work?
What does this even mean?
If you take the time to observe, your see how most of those poor babies get treated. Even if it costs 2K a month. Your baby needs to be loved. Not just diaper-changed every two hours, and then left alone.
So let's recap. You have nothing to contribute to OP's question but you stand in judgement. Not okay.
Let's recap. When you ask for the price of a service, we need to know the level of service you want/can afford. Do you want to find your child at the end of the day happy, well-rested, and ready to go home for dinner and bed? Or passive/angry, over-stimulated, and disagreeable?
Quality of care is of vital importance, imo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of care do you want?
Custodial care or real care?
Caregivers who hate their job, or
Caregivers who love their work?
What does this even mean?
If you take the time to observe, your see how most of those poor babies get treated. Even if it costs 2K a month. Your baby needs to be loved. Not just diaper-changed every two hours, and then left alone.
So let's recap. You have nothing to contribute to OP's question but you stand in judgement. Not okay.
Let's recap. When you ask for the price of a service, we need to know the level of service you want/can afford. Do you want to find your child at the end of the day happy, well-rested, and ready to go home for dinner and bed? Or passive/angry, over-stimulated, and disagreeable?
Quality of care is of vital importance, imo.
Anonymous wrote:I paid $350 a week for in-home on Capitol Hill.