Anonymous wrote:The attitude that SAHM are just waiting to drive your kid for you is amazing.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who was looking at private schools for her child. She believed that it was her responsibility to pick the right school for him, and that should be her focus. Things like distance/ease of commute, whether there was a bus that picked up in the neighborhood, etc., where factors that were not about what was best for her son and so they should not be considered when making the decision.
A few years in, she told me that if she were making the decision again, the very factors she had dismissed as not important were where she would start her process of elimination. So her search for the "perfect school" would not start with "what's best for DC?" but with, "what's most convenient for our family and among THOSE choices, what's best for DC?"
This really stuck with me. It really is okay--even right--to start from the premise that your DCs' schools should work for your family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do really, really feel for working parents, though. It's hard.
Thanks to you and the PPs who gave some detailed responses. I'm not the OP, but I'm the PP who posed the question about asking a SAHP to drive.
We have the resources to afford private school, but transportation to the schools we are interested in would be the number one sticking point. I appreciate the points made about why it probably wouldnt' work for another parent to do most of the driving.
The gas money piece wasn't meant to be insulting but more to say that I'd want to offer something as way of thanks for the assistance from the parent.[/quote
then u need to offer something substantial. like $2000 a month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:find families which whom to carpool.
Not OP, but in a carpool scenario, is anyone ever willing to do a one-driver carpool?
Meaning, say you're a SAHP in MD or VA who has always driven your child into DC everyday. I WOH full-time. If I paid you for gas, would you be willing to drive my child with you on a daily basis?
Maybe if the SAHP was really in need of money or extremely generous. I'm neither, I guess, and would rather just deal with my own kids.
This. I do not want to be tied down to your kid for gas money. If I needed it I would but it is not enough to make it worth it. If you were a long time friend who helped me, maybe. Hire a driver. I stay home to attend to my kids, not yours. [/quote
this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:find families which whom to carpool.
Not OP, but in a carpool scenario, is anyone ever willing to do a one-driver carpool?
Meaning, say you're a SAHP in MD or VA who has always driven your child into DC everyday. I WOH full-time. If I paid you for gas, would you be willing to drive my child with you on a daily basis?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are so generous with other people's time. "Oh, I'm sure she wouldn't mind." "It won't be any trouble at all." "You're going there anyway, right?"
It's obvious some people feel like it is no problem and others think it is a huge problem.
You think is it is impossibly inconvenient to have another chilli your car, me ...not so much.
Anonymous wrote:I do really, really feel for working parents, though. It's hard.
Anonymous wrote:The issue is that having additional kids in your car means that you are tied to bringing them home directly from school. You can't pick up your kids and head off to a park, you can't get together for in formal play dates with your children's friends, and you can't really do errands on your way home with other kids in tow. I used to carpool, and there was no problem with having an additional two children in the car. What it lacked, though, was any flexibility for the parent doing the driving. I wanted to be able to hang out with my kids at the library and do homework some days. I wanted to be able to schedule extracurriculars and I felt like, without having someone else's children in mind. By the time my kids were through early elementary years, we only went straight home from school one or possibly two days per week. And on some of those days, we had their friends coming home with us.
This may be different from when we parents were young, when people tended to do fewer outside activities after school. Also, the kids in my neighborhood growing up tended to play all together. Now that Kids from school are spread it throughout many neighborhoods, there's much more driving to and from play dates. So, I wouldn't take offense, or assume a parent who has chosen to stay at home is trying to be unfriendly, if she does not want to commit to driving additional kids, particularly for gas money. In fact, I would prefer to help someone out as a favor, rather then have a working parent offer me gas money. Really, it may come off as quite insulting. You may be able to find someone to help out, but I would be very careful how you approach it, as it might be easy to get a bad reputation if other parents feel you do not value their time, and especially their time with their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:find families which whom to carpool.
Not OP, but in a carpool scenario, is anyone ever willing to do a one-driver carpool?
Meaning, say you're a SAHP in MD or VA who has always driven your child into DC everyday. I WOH full-time. If I paid you for gas, would you be willing to drive my child with you on a daily basis?
Anonymous wrote:The issue is that having additional kids in your car means that you are tied to bringing them home directly from school. You can't pick up your kids and head off to a park, you can't get together for in formal play dates with your children's friends, and you can't really do errands on your way home with other kids in tow. I used to carpool, and there was no problem with having an additional two children in the car. What it lacked, though, was any flexibility for the parent doing the driving. I wanted to be able to hang out with my kids at the library and do homework some days. I wanted to be able to schedule extracurriculars and I felt like, without having someone else's children in mind. By the time my kids were through early elementary years, we only went straight home from school one or possibly two days per week. And on some of those days, we had their friends coming home with us.
This may be different from when we parents were young, when people tended to do fewer outside activities after school. Also, the kids in my neighborhood growing up tended to play all together. Now that Kids from school are spread it throughout many neighborhoods, there's much more driving to and from play dates. So, I wouldn't take offense, or assume a parent who has chosen to stay at home is trying to be unfriendly, if she does not want to commit to driving additional kids, particularly for gas money. In fact, I would prefer to help someone out as a favor, rather then have a working parent offer me gas money. Really, it may come off as quite insulting. You may be able to find someone to help out, but I would be very careful how you approach it, as it might be easy to get a bad reputation if other parents feel you do not value their time, and especially their time with their kids.