Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never correct someone in real life but I do always have the fleeting thought that it’s a bit pathetic when parents of daycare-age kids call it “school.” Makes me think they are in denial about sending kids to daycare, which I think is ridiculous because I fully support women working. It’s just the dishonesty that bothers me.
Whatever makes you feel better/superior about being a stay at home mom...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Btw nanny shares are unlicensed daycares, no thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daycare is for childcare, preschool is for enrichment.
My kids go to an accredited preschool at a daycare center. What does that count as, in your mind?
Np. Before this thread I would have called it daycare but I genuinely didn’t know that daycare was a bad word. Planning steering clear of it now as I wouldn’t want to unintentionally offend someone!
Anonymous wrote:I would never correct someone in real life but I do always have the fleeting thought that it’s a bit pathetic when parents of daycare-age kids call it “school.” Makes me think they are in denial about sending kids to daycare, which I think is ridiculous because I fully support women working. It’s just the dishonesty that bothers me.
Anonymous wrote:It’s all blurry. But the best part-time preschools (nonprofits governed by boards) have very little in common with daycare, and that’s why people pay so much $$ for it plus nanny or sahm.
At our school, the entire operation is focused on 2.5-5/6 year olds, including professional development, facilities, special events, etc. There is no napping, allowing parents to handle sleep as they prefer. No meals are served allowing much greater control over nutrition. Our kids had the same cohort and teacher team for three years. (No one is shifting between classes based on potty training status.) This allowed them to build deep relationships and alums are devoted to the place. There is a clear pedagogy that everyone is on board with, and parents can participate in class on a weekly basis (at least).
I get that it sounds pretentious and dcum will say it’s about pathetic sahm’s needing control, but in reality it’s meeting kids in the most age-appropriate way, and it’s a shame that it’s so expensive and rare.
Also, about a third of the parents go on to public elementary—for most this is not about feeding into elite privates. They’re willing to deal with the cost for these early years, even when dcps offers free preschool.
Anonymous wrote:I would never correct someone in real life but I do always have the fleeting thought that it’s a bit pathetic when parents of daycare-age kids call it “school.” Makes me think they are in denial about sending kids to daycare, which I think is ridiculous because I fully support women working. It’s just the dishonesty that bothers me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daycare is for childcare, preschool is for enrichment.
My kids go to an accredited preschool at a daycare center. What does that count as, in your mind?
Anonymous wrote:Daycare is for childcare, preschool is for enrichment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[mastodon]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an opinion on this which I will keep to myself since it is pointless to post it here, nobody is changing their mind.
That said, it appears to me that those who call daycare school are way more dogmatic about their belief than those who object to that. I don't really get why any of you want to participate in the so-called mommy war described in this thread.
It's pretty clear what you believe and also your assertion of who is more "dogmatic" is hilarious. Most of us use both terms interchangeably especially if our kids are in the prek3/4 rooms at their daycare (which, again, is NOT a term used by child care professionals, many of us use it for expediency but it's not correct either)
You sound really angry.
Strange. No, that person doesn’t sound remotely angry.
What, precisely, are the angry words? I’m really curious how you got “angry” out of something so innocuous. Are you typically super sensitive?
The first line and use of "hilarious" sounds really angry, as does this sock pupetting along with your accusations of being super sensitive.
But you do you. I guess I was wrong to show concern. 🤷♀️
Anonymous wrote:Just another SAHM vs Working Mom thing and here you are adding on.
That said, I sent my children to a full-day preschool that (a) had preschool in its name and (b) was certified by both the state and the NAEYC. So, if you end up in a conversation with someone who is saying your child is in daycare and theirs is in preschool, ask them if their church place is certified.
Anonymous wrote:It’s all blurry. But the best part-time preschools (nonprofits governed by boards) have very little in common with daycare, and that’s why people pay so much $$ for it plus nanny or sahm.
At our school, the entire operation is focused on 2.5-5/6 year olds, including professional development, facilities, special events, etc. There is no napping, allowing parents to handle sleep as they prefer. No meals are served allowing much greater control over nutrition. Our kids had the same cohort and teacher team for three years. (No one is shifting between classes based on potty training status.) This allowed them to build deep relationships and alums are devoted to the place. There is a clear pedagogy that everyone is on board with, and parents can participate in class on a weekly basis (at least).
I get that it sounds pretentious and dcum will say it’s about pathetic sahm’s needing control, but in reality it’s meeting kids in the most age-appropriate way, and it’s a shame that it’s so expensive and rare.
Also, about a third of the parents go on to public elementary—for most this is not about feeding into elite privates. They’re willing to deal with the cost for these early years, even when dcps offers free preschool.
Anonymous wrote:I have an opinion on this which I will keep to myself since it is pointless to post it here, nobody is changing their mind.
That said, it appears to me that those who call daycare school are way more dogmatic about their belief than those who object to that. I don't really get why any of you want to participate in the so-called mommy war described in this thread.