Anonymous wrote:Another one! I posted about Loden's Mom.
Let's call this The Child Star Syndrome. Your admittedly precocious and verbal child interjects him/her self into adult conversations and demands attention, usually just by talking loudly and interrupting. Of course, (usually) Mom immediately turns all attention to her child and allows her child to hijack the adult conversation - all the while beaming with pride.
Not cute, not endearing and not doing your kid any favors. No one loves your child as much as you do and you are raising your kid to be socially inept.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who call anything before kindergarten "school."
If your child is under the age of 5, he is not going to school. He is going to preschool, or daycare or moms' day out. Stop trying to justify it by calling it school - drop him off, let him have fun and socialize and do what you've got to/want to do. It's ok. Really.
Kids think of it as school and know that word.
Get a job. You're so pathetic and transparent.
I'm the OP of that comment and I seem to have touched a nerve. Here's the irony: I've always worked full time. My kids went to daycare. They thought of it as that and knew that word. When they started kindergarten they went to school.
Ok, so did you feel like you needed to "justify" sending them to daycare? Probably not. If you did, stop projecting on the rest of us. It's just a word. I can't believe anyone would care enough for it to bother them.
No, it bother me too. I sacrifice to have a nanny for my son and pay a proper preschool tuition for three hours every morning. Daycare is NOT SCHOOL. It is daycare.
talk about projecting. that's on you, dude. i don't need to sacrifice because my kid, who's reading quite well going into kindergarten, went to plain old daycare. but sometimes i call it school. because it DOESN'T MATTER.
If it DOESN'T MATTER then call it college or the circus. You called it "school" because you were trying to make it sound better than daycare. Admit it.
I call it "school" because that's what my three-year-old calls it. All the people I am even talking to her "school" about are already well aware that she's in daycare, and I don't make a secret of where she's at. I'm not trying to fool anyone or make myself feel better. I like where she's at, she likes where she's at, and if she wants to call it school, I just can't be bothered to correct her.
Also, she likes her daycare and likes going there, and if we can associate those positive feelings with "school," I'm all for it. I want her to be excited to go to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daycare is not school - it is daycare. Please stop calling it something that it is not. Yes, our kids learn in daycare and have school-like activities but it is not school.
It just makes parents who send their kids to daycare look like they have something to justify or be ashamed of. Our kids are in daycare - get over the shame.
I find this line of comments bizarre. I have no guilt about sending my child to daycare (for personal reasons we preferred it over a nanny), but I always refer to at as 'school' when I talk to my toddler daughter (i.e., it's time for school; we're at school; etc..). It's just easier to say. I call it daycare when talking to friends, 90% of the time. Not a big deal, and I think it's a reach to infer guilt from our choice of semantics.
Anonymous wrote:Daycare is not school - it is daycare. Please stop calling it something that it is not. Yes, our kids learn in daycare and have school-like activities but it is not school.
It just makes parents who send their kids to daycare look like they have something to justify or be ashamed of. Our kids are in daycare - get over the shame.
Anonymous wrote:Daycare is not school - it is daycare. Please stop calling it something that it is not. Yes, our kids learn in daycare and have school-like activities but it is not school.
It just makes parents who send their kids to daycare look like they have something to justify or be ashamed of. Our kids are in daycare - get over the shame.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who call anything before kindergarten "school."
If your child is under the age of 5, he is not going to school. He is going to preschool, or daycare or moms' day out. Stop trying to justify it by calling it school - drop him off, let him have fun and socialize and do what you've got to/want to do. It's ok. Really.
Kids think of it as school and know that word.
Get a job. You're so pathetic and transparent.
I'm the OP of that comment and I seem to have touched a nerve. Here's the irony: I've always worked full time. My kids went to daycare. They thought of it as that and knew that word. When they started kindergarten they went to school.
Ok, so did you feel like you needed to "justify" sending them to daycare? Probably not. If you did, stop projecting on the rest of us. It's just a word. I can't believe anyone would care enough for it to bother them.
No, it bother me too. I sacrifice to have a nanny for my son and pay a proper preschool tuition for three hours every morning. Daycare is NOT SCHOOL. It is daycare.
talk about projecting. that's on you, dude. i don't need to sacrifice because my kid, who's reading quite well going into kindergarten, went to plain old daycare. but sometimes i call it school. because it DOESN'T MATTER.
If it DOESN'T MATTER then call it college or the circus. You called it "school" because you were trying to make it sound better than daycare. Admit it.
I call it "school" because that's what my three-year-old calls it. All the people I am even talking to her "school" about are already well aware that she's in daycare, and I don't make a secret of where she's at. I'm not trying to fool anyone or make myself feel better. I like where she's at, she likes where she's at, and if she wants to call it school, I just can't be bothered to correct her.
Also, she likes her daycare and likes going there, and if we can associate those positive feelings with "school," I'm all for it. I want her to be excited to go to school.
She didn't decide on her own to call it school. She learned it from you. And you probably called at school because it sounded better than daycare.
And as someone else has pointed out, she's in for a hell of a shock when she goes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who call anything before kindergarten "school."
If your child is under the age of 5, he is not going to school. He is going to preschool, or daycare or moms' day out. Stop trying to justify it by calling it school - drop him off, let him have fun and socialize and do what you've got to/want to do. It's ok. Really.
Kids think of it as school and know that word.
Get a job. You're so pathetic and transparent.
I'm the OP of that comment and I seem to have touched a nerve. Here's the irony: I've always worked full time. My kids went to daycare. They thought of it as that and knew that word. When they started kindergarten they went to school.
Ok, so did you feel like you needed to "justify" sending them to daycare? Probably not. If you did, stop projecting on the rest of us. It's just a word. I can't believe anyone would care enough for it to bother them.
No, it bother me too. I sacrifice to have a nanny for my son and pay a proper preschool tuition for three hours every morning. Daycare is NOT SCHOOL. It is daycare.
talk about projecting. that's on you, dude. i don't need to sacrifice because my kid, who's reading quite well going into kindergarten, went to plain old daycare. but sometimes i call it school. because it DOESN'T MATTER.
If it DOESN'T MATTER then call it college or the circus. You called it "school" because you were trying to make it sound better than daycare. Admit it.
I call it "school" because that's what my three-year-old calls it. All the people I am even talking to her "school" about are already well aware that she's in daycare, and I don't make a secret of where she's at. I'm not trying to fool anyone or make myself feel better. I like where she's at, she likes where she's at, and if she wants to call it school, I just can't be bothered to correct her.
Also, she likes her daycare and likes going there, and if we can associate those positive feelings with "school," I'm all for it. I want her to be excited to go to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who call anything before kindergarten "school."
If your child is under the age of 5, he is not going to school. He is going to preschool, or daycare or moms' day out. Stop trying to justify it by calling it school - drop him off, let him have fun and socialize and do what you've got to/want to do. It's ok. Really.
Kids think of it as school and know that word.
Get a job. You're so pathetic and transparent.
I'm the OP of that comment and I seem to have touched a nerve. Here's the irony: I've always worked full time. My kids went to daycare. They thought of it as that and knew that word. When they started kindergarten they went to school.
Ok, so did you feel like you needed to "justify" sending them to daycare? Probably not. If you did, stop projecting on the rest of us. It's just a word. I can't believe anyone would care enough for it to bother them.
No, it bother me too. I sacrifice to have a nanny for my son and pay a proper preschool tuition for three hours every morning. Daycare is NOT SCHOOL. It is daycare.
talk about projecting. that's on you, dude. i don't need to sacrifice because my kid, who's reading quite well going into kindergarten, went to plain old daycare. but sometimes i call it school. because it DOESN'T MATTER.
If it DOESN'T MATTER then call it college or the circus. You called it "school" because you were trying to make it sound better than daycare. Admit it.
I call it "school" because that's what my three-year-old calls it. All the people I am even talking to her "school" about are already well aware that she's in daycare, and I don't make a secret of where she's at. I'm not trying to fool anyone or make myself feel better. I like where she's at, she likes where she's at, and if she wants to call it school, I just can't be bothered to correct her.
Also, she likes her daycare and likes going there, and if we can associate those positive feelings with "school," I'm all for it. I want her to be excited to go to school.
Your child id in daycare and she should know that she is in daycare. Her experiences at school will be very different. You are actually accomplishing the opposite of what you want.
I had two kids in daycare and ran into this same issue when the older started real school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who call anything before kindergarten "school."
If your child is under the age of 5, he is not going to school. He is going to preschool, or daycare or moms' day out. Stop trying to justify it by calling it school - drop him off, let him have fun and socialize and do what you've got to/want to do. It's ok. Really.
Kids think of it as school and know that word.
Get a job. You're so pathetic and transparent.
I'm the OP of that comment and I seem to have touched a nerve. Here's the irony: I've always worked full time. My kids went to daycare. They thought of it as that and knew that word. When they started kindergarten they went to school.
Ok, so did you feel like you needed to "justify" sending them to daycare? Probably not. If you did, stop projecting on the rest of us. It's just a word. I can't believe anyone would care enough for it to bother them.
No, it bother me too. I sacrifice to have a nanny for my son and pay a proper preschool tuition for three hours every morning. Daycare is NOT SCHOOL. It is daycare.
talk about projecting. that's on you, dude. i don't need to sacrifice because my kid, who's reading quite well going into kindergarten, went to plain old daycare. but sometimes i call it school. because it DOESN'T MATTER.
If it DOESN'T MATTER then call it college or the circus. You called it "school" because you were trying to make it sound better than daycare. Admit it.
I call it "school" because that's what my three-year-old calls it. All the people I am even talking to her "school" about are already well aware that she's in daycare, and I don't make a secret of where she's at. I'm not trying to fool anyone or make myself feel better. I like where she's at, she likes where she's at, and if she wants to call it school, I just can't be bothered to correct her.
Also, she likes her daycare and likes going there, and if we can associate those positive feelings with "school," I'm all for it. I want her to be excited to go to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who call anything before kindergarten "school."
If your child is under the age of 5, he is not going to school. He is going to preschool, or daycare or moms' day out. Stop trying to justify it by calling it school - drop him off, let him have fun and socialize and do what you've got to/want to do. It's ok. Really.
Kids think of it as school and know that word.
Get a job. You're so pathetic and transparent.
I'm the OP of that comment and I seem to have touched a nerve. Here's the irony: I've always worked full time. My kids went to daycare. They thought of it as that and knew that word. When they started kindergarten they went to school.
Ok, so did you feel like you needed to "justify" sending them to daycare? Probably not. If you did, stop projecting on the rest of us. It's just a word. I can't believe anyone would care enough for it to bother them.
No, it bother me too. I sacrifice to have a nanny for my son and pay a proper preschool tuition for three hours every morning. Daycare is NOT SCHOOL. It is daycare.
talk about projecting. that's on you, dude. i don't need to sacrifice because my kid, who's reading quite well going into kindergarten, went to plain old daycare. but sometimes i call it school. because it DOESN'T MATTER.
If it DOESN'T MATTER then call it college or the circus. You called it "school" because you were trying to make it sound better than daycare. Admit it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who call anything before kindergarten "school."
If your child is under the age of 5, he is not going to school. He is going to preschool, or daycare or moms' day out. Stop trying to justify it by calling it school - drop him off, let him have fun and socialize and do what you've got to/want to do. It's ok. Really.
Kids think of it as school and know that word.
Get a job. You're so pathetic and transparent.
I'm the OP of that comment and I seem to have touched a nerve. Here's the irony: I've always worked full time. My kids went to daycare. They thought of it as that and knew that word. When they started kindergarten they went to school.
Ok, so did you feel like you needed to "justify" sending them to daycare? Probably not. If you did, stop projecting on the rest of us. It's just a word. I can't believe anyone would care enough for it to bother them.
No, it bother me too. I sacrifice to have a nanny for my son and pay a proper preschool tuition for three hours every morning. Daycare is NOT SCHOOL. It is daycare.
talk about projecting. that's on you, dude. i don't need to sacrifice because my kid, who's reading quite well going into kindergarten, went to plain old daycare. but sometimes i call it school. because it DOESN'T MATTER.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the school thing at all. Why do you care?
My kid goes to a preschool with aftercare. Some kids stay full day and some are done just after the morning preschool. So now I have to say he goes to daycare those two days? Uh no. It's a preschool - preschool is in the damn name.