Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you find an in-home daycare in your neighborhood? That's what we used and it was $250/week. Your older kid could potentially go there after school too. Now, I have no clue how a teacher who needs to be at school in person and a spouse who is essential and travels are supposed to make this work if kids are not at school full time. Could you connect with a friend in older kid's class who you could trade off days with?
Why do people act like in homes are this easy to find solution. Every reputable, decent in home that has stayed open is not accepting new kids because the restrictions on numbers that include the providers family. And good in homes typically don’t take older kids. The shady ones might but the good ones don’t.
That has not been my experience at all. You shouldn’t generalize.
I would never send my kid to an in home that mixed much older kids with little ones
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you find an in-home daycare in your neighborhood? That's what we used and it was $250/week. Your older kid could potentially go there after school too. Now, I have no clue how a teacher who needs to be at school in person and a spouse who is essential and travels are supposed to make this work if kids are not at school full time. Could you connect with a friend in older kid's class who you could trade off days with?
Why do people act like in homes are this easy to find solution. Every reputable, decent in home that has stayed open is not accepting new kids because the restrictions on numbers that include the providers family. And good in homes typically don’t take older kids. The shady ones might but the good ones don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Am I missing something? A nanny makes between $20-25 an hour, so at minimum $800 a week if 40 hours. That's almost my whole salary as a teacher. I have a baby and an elementary kid and have no clue what we are doing for child care once schools open up.
Anonymous wrote:They do a nanny share.
Or, teachers don’t hire nannies. Teachers use day care.
I’m sorry for your predicament OP. Kids need to get back to school.
Anonymous wrote:We always assumed we couldn’t afford a nanny. So we looked at daycares. We are downtown. The absolute cheapest daycare downtown outside the federal employees ones is $2500 a month for an infant. CHEAPEST.
So, we’re doing a nanny share and it’s great. $24 per hour for two infants. On the books. About $2100 per kid, plus taxes, so a little less than daycare and more personal attention. Win/win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you find an in-home daycare in your neighborhood? That's what we used and it was $250/week. Your older kid could potentially go there after school too. Now, I have no clue how a teacher who needs to be at school in person and a spouse who is essential and travels are supposed to make this work if kids are not at school full time. Could you connect with a friend in older kid's class who you could trade off days with?
Why do people act like in homes are this easy to find solution. Every reputable, decent in home that has stayed open is not accepting new kids because the restrictions on numbers that include the providers family. And good in homes typically don’t take older kids. The shady ones might but the good ones don’t.
That has not been my experience at all. You shouldn’t generalize.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you find an in-home daycare in your neighborhood? That's what we used and it was $250/week. Your older kid could potentially go there after school too. Now, I have no clue how a teacher who needs to be at school in person and a spouse who is essential and travels are supposed to make this work if kids are not at school full time. Could you connect with a friend in older kid's class who you could trade off days with?
Why do people act like in homes are this easy to find solution. Every reputable, decent in home that has stayed open is not accepting new kids because the restrictions on numbers that include the providers family. And good in homes typically don’t take older kids. The shady ones might but the good ones don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you find an in-home daycare in your neighborhood? That's what we used and it was $250/week. Your older kid could potentially go there after school too. Now, I have no clue how a teacher who needs to be at school in person and a spouse who is essential and travels are supposed to make this work if kids are not at school full time. Could you connect with a friend in older kid's class who you could trade off days with?
Why do people act like in homes are this easy to find solution. Every reputable, decent in home that has stayed open is not accepting new kids because the restrictions on numbers that include the providers family. And good in homes typically don’t take older kids. The shady ones might but the good ones don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Can you find an in-home daycare in your neighborhood? That's what we used and it was $250/week. Your older kid could potentially go there after school too. Now, I have no clue how a teacher who needs to be at school in person and a spouse who is essential and travels are supposed to make this work if kids are not at school full time. Could you connect with a friend in older kid's class who you could trade off days with?