Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you letting your nanny give you guidelines on this? This area really is insane.
We allow our nanny to speak and have opinions. We like to treat her as an intelligent human with decades more experience than we have with children.
So it really is true that someone else is raising your child. THAT's what's sad.
Oh stop, Idiot. You are embarrassing yourself. PP takes her nanny's opinion into consideration. As all good managers of people do. Now go back to your hole.
Don't respond to her again, PP. She is the fat troll from the nanny forum. I recognize her style of writing.
I've never been on the nanny forum, but how naive are you to think only ONE person has this opinion? Bless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you letting your nanny give you guidelines on this? This area really is insane.
We allow our nanny to speak and have opinions. We like to treat her as an intelligent human with decades more experience than we have with children.
So it really is true that someone else is raising your child. THAT's what's sad.
Oh stop, Idiot. You are embarrassing yourself. PP takes her nanny's opinion into consideration. As all good managers of people do. Now go back to your hole.
Don't respond to her again, PP. She is the fat troll from the nanny forum. I recognize her style of writing.
Anonymous wrote:It really seems to depend on the kid-- I know I first started letting DD1 watch short videos around the age of 2 (on my laptop because we don't actually have a TV, but I'm a SAHM, so the laptop is always here), and she definitely was glued to the screen and had tantrums about wanting more. But DD2 has been able to see her sister playing games and watching brief videos since before the age of 2, and she doesn't have interest-- she will go get a book and ask me to read it to her instead. She has *NEVER* even asked to watch, let alone thrown a tantrum over it (she is now 2.5).
I do think your nanny's advice is great-- I would actually be loath to create a library trip/computer game association in my toddler's mind, esp. if we were going as regularly as you do! That definitely seems to be setting up a computer vs. books type thing. The library is exciting because there are tons of BOOKS there! And if you decide to use your laptop when you're at home for games, just make sure to set a timer to go off after 20 mins. or something and have the next activity set up for your kid to help him w/ the transition. (At that young age, I sometimes used it for a near-to-meltdown-hungry child when I just needed to quickly get dinner prepared, and the timer was set to go off when the food was on the table.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you introduce screen time and what did you start with? Also how did you limit it and how much time a day did you allow at two?
Our nanny thinks we should let DS watch on our laptops only so we bring them to work with us and he can't possibly ask to watch something when the devise is gone. Our pediatrician suggested we let him play educational games on the library computer only. I am happily looking forward to showing him "Winnie The Pooh" and other childhood favorites.
Also, did your child's interest in reading decrease when you introduced screens?
I agree with your pediatrician, not your nanny. Read between the lines, OP. Ped is saying your DS should only be on screens when at the library, which s/he is guessing is about once or twice a week at the most. Two is still too young for ANY screen time, IMO.
OP here and actually, no. The library is two blocks from our apartment - DC goes pretty much every day and pediatrician knows it.
NP here. I'm actually opposed to the idea of using the computers at the library because I think it's a place where kids should be playing with toys if provided and reading books.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you introduce screen time and what did you start with? Also how did you limit it and how much time a day did you allow at two?
Our nanny thinks we should let DS watch on our laptops only so we bring them to work with us and he can't possibly ask to watch something when the devise is gone. Our pediatrician suggested we let him play educational games on the library computer only. I am happily looking forward to showing him "Winnie The Pooh" and other childhood favorites.
Also, did your child's interest in reading decrease when you introduced screens?
I agree with your pediatrician, not your nanny. Read between the lines, OP. Ped is saying your DS should only be on screens when at the library, which s/he is guessing is about once or twice a week at the most. Two is still too young for ANY screen time, IMO.
OP here and actually, no. The library is two blocks from our apartment - DC goes pretty much every day and pediatrician knows it.
Anonymous wrote:Oh pp here. My kid does not watch high quality shows. he loves watching you tube videos of people unwrapping toys. Kids are weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you introduce screen time and what did you start with? Also how did you limit it and how much time a day did you allow at two?
Our nanny thinks we should let DS watch on our laptops only so we bring them to work with us and he can't possibly ask to watch something when the devise is gone. Our pediatrician suggested we let him play educational games on the library computer only. I am happily looking forward to showing him "Winnie The Pooh" and other childhood favorites.
Also, did your child's interest in reading decrease when you introduced screens?
I agree with your pediatrician, not your nanny. Read between the lines, OP. Ped is saying your DS should only be on screens when at the library, which s/he is guessing is about once or twice a week at the most. Two is still too young for ANY screen time, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:How did you introduce screen time and what did you start with? Also how did you limit it and how much time a day did you allow at two?
Our nanny thinks we should let DS watch on our laptops only so we bring them to work with us and he can't possibly ask to watch something when the devise is gone. Our pediatrician suggested we let him play educational games on the library computer only. I am happily looking forward to showing him "Winnie The Pooh" and other childhood favorites.
Also, did your child's interest in reading decrease when you introduced screens?