Anonymous wrote:OP Update:
Some language immersion place just emailed me for an interview; they supposedly pay $40,000-50,000. I can speak Chinese and Japanese due to growing up with a quasi-"Tiger Mom" (without the tiger $$$, unfortunately). God I hope this works out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the OP. Actually I've been thinking about doing that! How do you do that? Do the kids just stay in your living room? We live in a townhouse so there's not a lot of space... How much do you charge per week to watch other people's kids? Do you just advertise on Craigslist?
You let people who already know you and trust you (because you spend a lot of time around them with their kids) know that you are agreeable to doing some childcare.
If you plan to be an in home child care provider, there is a formal process regulated by the county. Contact their office and find out how to become licensed.
Yes, if you are caring for your own children in your living room, you would care for additional children in the living room, also kitchen, basement, wherever your children are.
Anonymous wrote:OP again (I forgot to identify myself in the previous post). Thank you for all your responses!
I actually count myself lucky for my DH's job (even though it pays like crap). Our former classmates are completely unemployed (though most don't have kids yet, so that's a relief for them). I read in the Wall Street Journal that a large % of law school grads are working temporary minimum-wage jobs... My classmates aren't even doing that. They're completely, absolutely unemployed.
I am thinking about attempting a new career. Does anyone know of any careers with good employment prospects? I considered nursing, but I'm not good at math or science.
Anonymous wrote:OP again (I forgot to identify myself in the previous post). Thank you for all your responses!
I actually count myself lucky for my DH's job (even though it pays like crap). Our former classmates are completely unemployed (though most don't have kids yet, so that's a relief for them). I read in the Wall Street Journal that a large % of law school grads are working temporary minimum-wage jobs... My classmates aren't even doing that. They're completely, absolutely unemployed.
I am thinking about attempting a new career. Does anyone know of any careers with good employment prospects? I considered nursing, but I'm not good at math or science.
Anonymous wrote:OP again (I forgot to identify myself in the previous post). Thank you for all your responses!
I actually count myself lucky for my DH's job (even though it pays like crap). Our former classmates are completely unemployed (though most don't have kids yet, so that's a relief for them). I read in the Wall Street Journal that a large % of law school grads are working temporary minimum-wage jobs... My classmates aren't even doing that. They're completely, absolutely unemployed.
I am thinking about attempting a new career. Does anyone know of any careers with good employment prospects? I considered nursing, but I'm not good at math or science.
Anonymous wrote:$370K for student loans - where the heck did you guys go to school and what kind of degrees? More importantly why did you bother? It doesn't sound like it was worth it!
Anonymous wrote:I'm not even an attorney and I am astounded at the number of PPs who suggested the OP hang her own shingle. Don't they know how much malpractice insurance costs? And filing fees? And business expenses? No way in hell would that be profitable. I do wonder how this worked out...
Anonymous wrote:OP here... Wow, thanks for all the suggestions. I made a list of realistic options given my childcare situation:
1) Childcare (I made some ads tonight... not sure where to advertise other than Craigslist)
2) I'm good at standardized tests... Maybe SAT tutor?