Anonymous wrote:Then why not give "feedback " to the agency and let it be up to them whether to say anything to the sitter. My guess is the agency will have a conniption. Because it is disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe your kid isn't a good listener. An adult watching him tells him to something 3 times and he didn't? Sounds like the entitled brats I work with.
Why do we say "listen" when we mean "obey"? What OP's kid probably isn't, is a good obeyer.
Anonymous wrote:She's a pushover. Get rid of her.
Anonymous wrote:We are super lucky that when kids are out of school, our workplace will send a nanny from a service to watch the kids. I was working from home, and she took my 5 and 7 out for a walk. I met them in the kitchen, where she told me he carried a bleeding, dead bird home in his palm, and left him in the carport. I looked at her bewildered. She said, "I asked him three times to put it down, and he wouldn't." Of course he got an earful from me for not listening, but come on. Shouldn't she have been more insistent?
I am thinking about telling the agency, but wonder if this is an over reaction. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe your kid isn't a good listener. An adult watching him tells him to something 3 times and he didn't? Sounds like the entitled brats I work with.
Anonymous wrote:Is this post for real? If so, yes you are way over reaching. What kind of disease are you afraid your child with catch? Tell your child to wash his hands, well, with warm water and soap and that when a babysitter is in charge he/she is IN CHARGE and that if it is true that the babysitter told your kid not once, not twice, but three times to put down the dead bird, then your child is not respecting the authority of the babysitter. Now if your child was playing in traffic or with a gun or running with scissors and your babysitter didn't get more insistent, then I agree you should be upset. But in this situation I think you are over reacting. Yes, a dead bird is gross, but what is telling the agency going to do? Hello, I would like to report the nanny your agency sent me allowed my child to carry a dead bird in his hands, even after she asked him three times to put it down.
Anonymous wrote:We are super lucky that when kids are out of school, our workplace will send a nanny from a service to watch the kids. I was working from home, and she took my 5 and 7 out for a walk. I met them in the kitchen, where she told me he carried a bleeding, dead bird home in his palm, and left him in the carport. I looked at her bewildered. She said, "I asked him three times to put it down, and he wouldn't." Of course he got an earful from me for not listening, but come on. Shouldn't she have been more insistent?
I am thinking about telling the agency, but wonder if this is an over reaction. Thoughts?