Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher and you are so right. Great pointAnonymous wrote:I think that everybody is trying to make the mother feel better. To be honest the reason the children behave better with the nanny is because she is consistent with discipline. Parents dismiss a lot of whining and bad behavior where the nanny will say no, reason, or give the child a time out. If parents took more time out to say no to the whining and bad behavior it would be consistent all around!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that everybody is trying to make the mother feel better. To be honest the reason the children behave better with the nanny is because she is consistent with discipline. Parents dismiss a lot of whining and bad behavior where the nanny will say no, reason, or give the child a time out. If parents took more time out to say no to the whining and bad behavior it would be consistent all around!
Nanny here.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that everybody is trying to make the mother feel better. To be honest the reason the children behave better with the nanny is because she is consistent with discipline. Parents dismiss a lot of whining and bad behavior where the nanny will say no, reason, or give the child a time out. If parents took more time out to say no to the whining and bad behavior it would be consistent all around!
Nonsense, but I love your optimistic point of view...getting a two year old to stop "whining." Hilarious. Nannies and day care providers usually are with the toddlers when the children are well-rested and at their best. Parents have to deal with the tricky times of day. Early mornings can be rough, because of the rushed routine, and toddlers hate a rushed routine they can't completely control. And that time between 5 o'clock and bedtime (the unhappy hour) is the worst. Toddlers are tired and frequently overstimulated. The transition time between dinner and bedtime can be quite a challenge for all parties.
This thread is 5 years old...someone is bored![]()
I disagree. I have been a nanny for years. The kids act the way they do with their parents because they are allowed to. Of course a toddler will whine, but how much they whine and if they get what they want from whining depend on the adult's reaction. Toddlers have hundreds of neurons firing every second, so they are very emotional, but also able to understand basic consequences. I have been an over night nanny, weekend, date night, and currently a regular daytime nanny. Kids change behavior quite quickly when I see them on a regular basis, but their behavior doesn't change for the parents. My current family's parents are willing to see what works and it is helping. The mother is open to suggestion and she is seeing improvement. Her toddler is wild when I am not there because it breaks her heart, and ends up giving in just to get peace, but she is working on staying strong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that everybody is trying to make the mother feel better. To be honest the reason the children behave better with the nanny is because she is consistent with discipline. Parents dismiss a lot of whining and bad behavior where the nanny will say no, reason, or give the child a time out. If parents took more time out to say no to the whining and bad behavior it would be consistent all around!
Nonsense, but I love your optimistic point of view...getting a two year old to stop "whining." Hilarious. Nannies and day care providers usually are with the toddlers when the children are well-rested and at their best. Parents have to deal with the tricky times of day. Early mornings can be rough, because of the rushed routine, and toddlers hate a rushed routine they can't completely control. And that time between 5 o'clock and bedtime (the unhappy hour) is the worst. Toddlers are tired and frequently overstimulated. The transition time between dinner and bedtime can be quite a challenge for all parties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that everybody is trying to make the mother feel better. To be honest the reason the children behave better with the nanny is because she is consistent with discipline. Parents dismiss a lot of whining and bad behavior where the nanny will say no, reason, or give the child a time out. If parents took more time out to say no to the whining and bad behavior it would be consistent all around!
Interesting perspective. My kid was like this as a baby, toddler, and still, as a 9 year old. Now he can tell me why he does it, though. He'll spend his day at school, where he is described as helpful, empathetic, and curious. He'll come home, grump about his homework, rebel at doing the dishes, and refuse to talk to his grandmother on the phone. Then as I sit next to him in his bedroom as he's winding down for sleep he'll say "I'm sorry, Mom. I was kinda a jerk this evening." Long, long pause. "I didn't pass my multiplication quiz. And the whole grade got banned from playing tag games at recess because one person had his feelings hurt, and I love tag and now we can't play all year long."
We save our big stuff for the people we love. Grown ups, 9 year olds, and toddlers.
Anonymous wrote:I think that everybody is trying to make the mother feel better. To be honest the reason the children behave better with the nanny is because she is consistent with discipline. Parents dismiss a lot of whining and bad behavior where the nanny will say no, reason, or give the child a time out. If parents took more time out to say no to the whining and bad behavior it would be consistent all around!