Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Great. So answer the question: What do working parents do for childcare?
It's been answered repeatedly--they choose programs that don't close as often, usually called "daycares" rather than "preschools." The curriculum is often quite similar, but a daycare program will close less often because it's also explicitly serving as child care for working parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Great. So answer the question: What do working parents do for childcare?
Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Anonymous wrote:We chose a preschool which is daycare with a preschool piece. They don't close for vacation.
Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Anonymous wrote:No idea.
What annoys me most are the obnoxious posters on this site who excoriate worried parents before snow days about how they should have a couple of back-up plans always in place.
As if most families could afford that or have a family/friends network in place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working parents (without extra help) choose different programs that are not closed as much.
Exactly this. It's one of the first questions I asked of each place "what is your holiday/day off schedule?"
Anonymous wrote:What do we do? For one, we looked over calendars carefully before deciding. We chose a full day full year program, and one of the reasons we picked our school vs our other top choice was that the school was only closed one wk in August. The other school closed for 2 wks.
Super happy with our choice. They rarely close, even for minor snow events that trigger public schools to close when there's barely anything ohn the ground.
Anonymous wrote:Most people using " preschools" are SAHM or have Nannies. Preschools are not for working parents to have childcare. If you are using a daycare with a preschool component I am surprised they are closed that often.
Anonymous wrote:School is not child care