Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nanny here. My employers and I agree about children and help... A child who can do something on their own doesn't need an adult to do it for them. If they can't do it for themselves, they need to practice until they can, but it's the adult's job not to push the child too far. For us, this means not putting children onto any structure they can't navigate on their own. I'm happy to hover within arms reach while they climb, but they need to be able to climb up and down on their own.
I do not respond to children screaming for help on structures. I've seen my charges do that, many times, and I don't want to count how many people I've stopped from lifting them down. If they climb up, they can climb or slide down, they just don't want to do it.
I disagree as a teacher sometimes kids don’t know how to get down or are afraid. The way you stated it sounds like a kid is just screaming for attention. When you are on the playground with 120 kids that is rare. The kids however do get afraid sometimes. I never touch but I will talk a kid down. Sometimes
They don’t know where to place their hands and feet or just need a voice guiding them. When they are down that is when you say if you can’t get down, don’t try that til you are ready.
Anonymous wrote:Help if they’re stuck, yes. Help onto a swing, no.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll help them down, but not up. I don’t want to help a kid into a situation they aren’t coordinated enough to handle alone. I’ll also tie a shoe or make impressed sounds as needed.
Anonymous wrote:Nanny here. My employers and I agree about children and help... A child who can do something on their own doesn't need an adult to do it for them. If they can't do it for themselves, they need to practice until they can, but it's the adult's job not to push the child too far. For us, this means not putting children onto any structure they can't navigate on their own. I'm happy to hover within arms reach while they climb, but they need to be able to climb up and down on their own.
I do not respond to children screaming for help on structures. I've seen my charges do that, many times, and I don't want to count how many people I've stopped from lifting them down. If they climb up, they can climb or slide down, they just don't want to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d of course intervene on a safety issue.
I hate it when kids who aren’t mine ask me to swing them, watch them do something, help them on monkey bars, etc., when I can see their own parent/caregiver sitting around scrolling on the phone. I’ll politely pay attention to them for a minute and then explain I need to attend to my own kids.
+1 I hate it too. Those kids are so annoying and starved for attention!
+2. Same and I’m a nanny. I find it truly loathsome that negligent parents consider themselves “free range” and anti-helicopter parents when it’s strangers who are forced to watch and encourage their children.
No one wants you helicoptering around their children. Keep your eyes on your own paper.
LOL. Found the lazy parent!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d of course intervene on a safety issue.
I hate it when kids who aren’t mine ask me to swing them, watch them do something, help them on monkey bars, etc., when I can see their own parent/caregiver sitting around scrolling on the phone. I’ll politely pay attention to them for a minute and then explain I need to attend to my own kids.
+1 I hate it too. Those kids are so annoying and starved for attention!
+2. Same and I’m a nanny. I find it truly loathsome that negligent parents consider themselves “free range” and anti-helicopter parents when it’s strangers who are forced to watch and encourage their children.
No one wants you helicoptering around their children. Keep your eyes on your own paper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d of course intervene on a safety issue.
I hate it when kids who aren’t mine ask me to swing them, watch them do something, help them on monkey bars, etc., when I can see their own parent/caregiver sitting around scrolling on the phone. I’ll politely pay attention to them for a minute and then explain I need to attend to my own kids.
+1 I hate it too. Those kids are so annoying and starved for attention!
+2. Same and I’m a nanny. I find it truly loathsome that negligent parents consider themselves “free range” and anti-helicopter parents when it’s strangers who are forced to watch and encourage their children.
Anonymous wrote:While I'd prefer that everyone had an "it takes a village" mentality, the reality is that a lot of people are really weird and will freak out if they see you touching their kids. I have definitely helped toddlers on playground equipment, e.g, a child wanting to get down but struggling with the ladder. But mostly our individualistic society dictates that we don't touch, discipline, or interfere in any way with another person's child. Just look at how people on here freak out when someone at the park tells their child to stop throwing sand or pushing small children.