Anonymous wrote:So?
I had an infant and K-er and it all went very smoothly.
People are so weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is also a Type I diabetic herself, so high risk for COVID. I talked to her last week and she said she is "terrified" at the prospect of dealing with an infant (she's due in 4 weeks) and a kindergartener who will be in MCPS and is an anxious kid to begin with.
How can I help her? Normally I'd bring over food to them, but she is understandably nervous about people coming over, given COVID.
Hoping the expectant and post-partum moms here can give me tips.
Terrified of taking care of the two children she chose to have?
I have an infant, a rising kindergartener and will be teleworking and I can't say I'm thrilled about the situation. Have some compassion.
Agreed. I have a newborn and a 4yo, and DH and I are both teleworking. It took a long time to find any semblance of a rhythm for us, and the newborn likes to keep us on our toes. Compassion is certainly lacking here. Obviously, no one with an infant or due in the next few months planned to have a baby in a pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is also a Type I diabetic herself, so high risk for COVID. I talked to her last week and she said she is "terrified" at the prospect of dealing with an infant (she's due in 4 weeks) and a kindergartener who will be in MCPS and is an anxious kid to begin with.
How can I help her? Normally I'd bring over food to them, but she is understandably nervous about people coming over, given COVID.
Hoping the expectant and post-partum moms here can give me tips.
Terrified of taking care of the two children she chose to have?
Anonymous wrote:So?
I had an infant and K-er and it all went very smoothly.
People are so weird.
Anonymous wrote:She is also a Type I diabetic herself, so high risk for COVID. I talked to her last week and she said she is "terrified" at the prospect of dealing with an infant (she's due in 4 weeks) and a kindergartener who will be in MCPS and is an anxious kid to begin with.
How can I help her? Normally I'd bring over food to them, but she is understandably nervous about people coming over, given COVID.
Hoping the expectant and post-partum moms here can give me tips.
Anonymous wrote:She is also a Type I diabetic herself, so high risk for COVID. I talked to her last week and she said she is "terrified" at the prospect of dealing with an infant (she's due in 4 weeks) and a kindergartener who will be in MCPS and is an anxious kid to begin with.
How can I help her? Normally I'd bring over food to them, but she is understandably nervous about people coming over, given COVID.
Hoping the expectant and post-partum moms here can give me tips.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If her husband is a NIH employee, they really should not worry much about "educating" their K kid or their kid falling behind. The truth is that K is pretty much useless educationally for kids from educated families. For them, it is mostly social/emotional (which NONE of the kids are getting right now so everyone is in the same boat). Plus whenever they return to fulltime school, the lower elementary classes are going to be mostly review anyway. Bottom line is, with a kid whose parents are college educated and work at NIH, assuming the kid is neurotypical, you can do very little for K and the kid will still be fine when they start again.
This.
They can probably also afford a PT tutor if they really want him to learn to read this year.
Anonymous wrote:My twins were slated to start K in the fall and we are skipping it. In the spring I taught them to read with the Learning Dynamics 4-weeks-to-read Boxed curriculum. We are learning to count to 100 and do basic math by doing board games and doing projects like I made them count a big bowl of fruit loops by color before eating cereal for lunch one day. They get to watch 30 minutes of educational tv every day (like documentaries, not like Dora is “teaching them spanish”). And we read a LOT. I bring a non-fiction and a fiction chapter boom with us to the park every day and read aloud while they eat. They are at or ahead of end-of-K milestones in most areas and we only do formal “school” for like 30 minutes a day per kid, and not at all on weekends. I don’t know what your relationship with her is but it is very easy to do homeschool for this age, and much more flexible than the nightmare that is DL per all of my friends who did it last year.