dcmom wrote:Anonymous wrote:We will be using before and after are for our kindergarten aged child.
I doubt it will be offered next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We will be using before and after are for our kindergarten aged child.
Hahahahaha. Do you think you will have that option for the off days- or any days?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a nanny this is great for us. If you want to keep my availability open, you need to pay me 40hrs. I already have a new family. Old family just wanted to pay me for part time hours, but new family is willing to pay full time to retain me in case of shut downs or schedule changes so I get guaranteed hours. I suggest you do the same if you want to keep reliable childcare. Nannies won’t stick around if they can get paid full time hours somewhere else.
Then more nannies will enter the market - teachers with masters degrees who retired or too medical leave bc they didn’t want the exposure.
Anonymous wrote:As a nanny this is great for us. If you want to keep my availability open, you need to pay me 40hrs. I already have a new family. Old family just wanted to pay me for part time hours, but new family is willing to pay full time to retain me in case of shut downs or schedule changes so I get guaranteed hours. I suggest you do the same if you want to keep reliable childcare. Nannies won’t stick around if they can get paid full time hours somewhere else.
Anonymous wrote:There won’t be before or after care! Mixing kids like that will negate any benefit to having smaller classes during the day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a nanny this is great for us. If you want to keep my availability open, you need to pay me 40hrs. I already have a new family. Old family just wanted to pay me for part time hours, but new family is willing to pay full time to retain me in case of shut downs or schedule changes so I get guaranteed hours. I suggest you do the same if you want to keep reliable childcare. Nannies won’t stick around if they can get paid full time hours somewhere else.
Thanks for the threatening tip that was unrelated to OPs question or anyone who can't afford a nanny. There's a nanny board for these posts.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I don’t know what we’d do yet. Our older two will be in first and third next year, and all I know is that what happened the last three months CANNOT continue for the entirety of the 2020-2021 school year.
Frankly, I might push to homeschool them and then find essential childcare for school-aged kids (which we qualify for thanks to DH’s job). Two days a week in school is the bare minimum we could tolerate, and even that is stretching it. Distance learning for early elementary kids was, in our experience, a disaster.
Anonymous wrote:As a nanny this is great for us. If you want to keep my availability open, you need to pay me 40hrs. I already have a new family. Old family just wanted to pay me for part time hours, but new family is willing to pay full time to retain me in case of shut downs or schedule changes so I get guaranteed hours. I suggest you do the same if you want to keep reliable childcare. Nannies won’t stick around if they can get paid full time hours somewhere else.
Anonymous wrote:We’re thinking about continuing our 5-year-old in pre-K. It’s a full day program and he could just go on his off days.