Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What bothers me most about this is not that the kid was left behind -- I can sort of understand that happening with a big group of moving kids, making it hard to get anaccurate head count -- but that no one noticed for an hour. Don't the teachers know and like their kids enough to notice when someone is missing? Either the teahcers are disengaged, the classes are too big, or both.
This. Kids move and squirm, which could lead to accidentally counting an "extra" kid that isn't actually lined up. There's also more than one adult, so I can also see how you get a situation where one adult thinks the other adult got the count. But once they are back in the classroom, how can they NOT register that they are missing a kid? Even if you assume that it wasn't a whole hour, even if it was 30 minutes, that is just way. too. long.
the situation where it could occur would be a miscommunication on a parent picking up a child at the park.
you bring 12 children - a parent comes and picks up a child - another parent passes by waves but does not pick up a child - teachers start to leave to do a count - they count 10 - they get back to the school - wash hands - use potty - a parent or 2 comes to pick up - it is not until "THE" parent come sthat the have the OH SH!T moment.
Transition times are opportunities for failure. FCC became aware of this at a new level earlier this week.
The teachers should carry a sign in/out board at that hour knowing some parents will take the kids from the park or bathroom/other issues and log everything. Its too easy to forget and something like this happen especially when you have 8+ kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a parent and a friend of the family who this posting is about, whose 2 yr old son was left at Livingston by FCC on Tuesday afternoon. We saw the news story and wanted to point out an inaccuracy. The FCC Director was quoted as saying that the boy who was left at the playground was in school the following day. This information is incorrect. The family kept their son out of school following the incident and has since made the decision to take him out of the school permanently. He's no longer enrolled at FCC.
Showing up the following day and still being enrolled is completely different. The child could very well still be enrolled (spot is reserved for that child, parents already paid for the child to be there all month) and just not show up the next day. Does not seem inaccurate to me. However, I am going off the information that was provided in the link.
Anonymous wrote:I am a parent and a friend of the family who this posting is about, whose 2 yr old son was left at Livingston by FCC on Tuesday afternoon. We saw the news story and wanted to point out an inaccuracy. The FCC Director was quoted as saying that the boy who was left at the playground was in school the following day. This information is incorrect. The family kept their son out of school following the incident and has since made the decision to take him out of the school permanently. He's no longer enrolled at FCC.
Anonymous wrote:I am a parent and a friend of the family who this posting is about, whose 2 yr old son was left at Livingston by FCC on Tuesday afternoon. We saw the news story and wanted to point out an inaccuracy. The FCC Director was quoted as saying that the boy who was left at the playground was in school the following day. This information is incorrect. The family kept their son out of school following the incident and has since made the decision to take him out of the school permanently. He's no longer enrolled at FCC.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This story is horrifying and my reaction is THANK GOD that my DH and I can afford to live on one income (even though things are very tight) so that I can stay home while my kids are young.
Wow, you just are evil aren't you.
Anonymous wrote:I am a parent and a friend of the family who this posting is about, whose 2 yr old son was left at Livingston by FCC on Tuesday afternoon. We saw the news story and wanted to point out an inaccuracy. The FCC Director was quoted as saying that the boy who was left at the playground was in school the following day. This information is incorrect. The family kept their son out of school following the incident and has since made the decision to take him out of the school permanently. He's no longer enrolled at FCC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What bothers me most about this is not that the kid was left behind -- I can sort of understand that happening with a big group of moving kids, making it hard to get anaccurate head count -- but that no one noticed for an hour. Don't the teachers know and like their kids enough to notice when someone is missing? Either the teahcers are disengaged, the classes are too big, or both.
This. Kids move and squirm, which could lead to accidentally counting an "extra" kid that isn't actually lined up. There's also more than one adult, so I can also see how you get a situation where one adult thinks the other adult got the count. But once they are back in the classroom, how can they NOT register that they are missing a kid? Even if you assume that it wasn't a whole hour, even if it was 30 minutes, that is just way. too. long.
the situation where it could occur would be a miscommunication on a parent picking up a child at the park.
you bring 12 children - a parent comes and picks up a child - another parent passes by waves but does not pick up a child - teachers start to leave to do a count - they count 10 - they get back to the school - wash hands - use potty - a parent or 2 comes to pick up - it is not until "THE" parent come sthat the have the OH SH!T moment.
Transition times are opportunities for failure. FCC became aware of this at a new level earlier this week.
Anonymous wrote:A terrible terrible situation no doubt. Should the center be shut down? Probably not, but what absolutely needs to happen is some real shake up. I am troubled by this situation for obvious reasons. I am a parent...and an FCC parent at that. I am even more troubled by the fact that issues regarding the attentiveness of FCC staff while off site is not a new issue, and that this is the second major incident that has occurred at FCC in the past six months! Another child was severely burned by hot water. All completely unacceptable.
Considering these major incidents together with several other observations I have made regarding the lack of attention to detail, such as stair gates consistently open while children roam around freely and lapses in staff certifications, lead me to think the shake up needs to include not only staff but also leadership.
Anonymous wrote:A terrible terrible situation no doubt. Should the center be shut down? Probably not, but what absolutely needs to happen is some real shake up. I am troubled by this situation for obvious reasons. I am a parent...and an FCC parent at that. I am even more troubled by the fact that issues regarding the attentiveness of FCC staff while off site is not a new issue, and that this is the second major incident that has occurred at FCC in the past six months! Another child was severely burned by hot water. All completely unacceptable.
Considering these major incidents together with several other observations I have made regarding the lack of attention to detail, such as stair gates consistently open while children roam around freely and lapses in staff certifications, lead me to think the shake up needs to include not only staff but also leadership.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What bothers me most about this is not that the kid was left behind -- I can sort of understand that happening with a big group of moving kids, making it hard to get anaccurate head count -- but that no one noticed for an hour. Don't the teachers know and like their kids enough to notice when someone is missing? Either the teahcers are disengaged, the classes are too big, or both.
This. Kids move and squirm, which could lead to accidentally counting an "extra" kid that isn't actually lined up. There's also more than one adult, so I can also see how you get a situation where one adult thinks the other adult got the count. But once they are back in the classroom, how can they NOT register that they are missing a kid? Even if you assume that it wasn't a whole hour, even if it was 30 minutes, that is just way. too. long.