Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At my daughter's daycare we're welcome to hang out and play for awhile, or stop in the other classrooms to say hi to the teachers. For me, it's very important that the place where my child spends so much time is a home-like environment that's warm and welcoming-I'd be very put off by what OP describes.
Likewise. All the teachers and staff know each child by name. We don't actually go into other classrooms but if we did, I'm sure they wouldn't be upset (unless it were the infant room where you have to take shoes off).
If that's what daycare requests, I guess that's what you have to do, but I would be put off by it as well.
Anonymous wrote:Daycare owner here: when you pick up your child please GO. It is not visiting time. We are still working, other children need our attention and you are a distraction. Go home and play with your child!
Anonymous wrote:DC is 2 years old and is curious about everything. We are new to the daycare environment. Last week DC's teacher at the daycare told me that on the way out we should walk straight from the classroom to the entrance of the daycare without making any stops in the middle. And the teacher said it's for safety reasons.
I was surprised when I heard this. I would consider the daycare to be a safe environment for DC to explore. We hold hands and walk between the parking lot and the daycare. When we are inside the daycare, I let him walk in front of me between the entrance and the classroom. He is within my sight all the time. Usually on the way out he likes to go to the kids reading area for a while, and he did slip into the admin office and the teacher's area nearby for a few times (the doors were all open). I pulled him out immediately and told him that those are not his play areas. Occasionally he wants to peak into other classrooms to see what other kids are doing. I never thought this would be a big issue, and the request has been bothering me. Any similar experience or advice? TIA
Anonymous wrote:You guys are going to be horrific when your kids get to school.
Rules? Not for your Special Kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In this thread you can really tell which PPs are normal and which PPs are raising hellions.
I have older kids, I often wonder, what kind of parenting led you to be so rude.
Now I know.
Anonymous wrote:In this thread you can really tell which PPs are normal and which PPs are raising hellions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the different perspectives. I pick up DC hours before the daycare closes, so it's not about the closing time. All we do is walk down an aisle from classroom to door, not back and forth wandering around. Along the hallway, DC just wants to take a peek at the other classrooms, but we do not actually go into any of them. We only go to the reading area when it is empty. If there is a class there, we do not go. Adult area is off limits and we will work on that. I have no problem taking him straight out of the door, but he likes to go to the reading area. DC is going through the T2 phase, and I just don't know if this is the battle I should choose.
Yes you should. You've been asked to take him straight out. What he likes and wants to do isn't at issue here. If the reading area is empty I would imagine the staff is expecting it to stay empty. Perhaps other kids notice him peeking in and get distracted. Really though it doesn't matter why. The center has asked you to take him straight out, so that's what you need to do.
One person told OP that it was a "safety issue". Personally, if one of my child's daycare teachers said that it was annoying/distracting/my child was making a mess, I would respect that and do as she asked. But I really dislike being told that a rule is about safety when it isn't. I would clarify with the teacher whether this is a policy or a preference and find out the reason behind it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the different perspectives. I pick up DC hours before the daycare closes, so it's not about the closing time. All we do is walk down an aisle from classroom to door, not back and forth wandering around. Along the hallway, DC just wants to take a peek at the other classrooms, but we do not actually go into any of them. We only go to the reading area when it is empty. If there is a class there, we do not go. Adult area is off limits and we will work on that. I have no problem taking him straight out of the door, but he likes to go to the reading area. DC is going through the T2 phase, and I just don't know if this is the battle I should choose.
Yes you should. You've been asked to take him straight out. What he likes and wants to do isn't at issue here. If the reading area is empty I would imagine the staff is expecting it to stay empty. Perhaps other kids notice him peeking in and get distracted. Really though it doesn't matter why. The center has asked you to take him straight out, so that's what you need to do.
One person told OP that it was a "safety issue". Personally, if one of my child's daycare teachers said that it was annoying/distracting/my child was making a mess, I would respect that and do as she asked. But I really dislike being told that a rule is about safety when it isn't. I would clarify with the teacher whether this is a policy or a preference and find out the reason behind it.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the different perspectives. I pick up DC hours before the daycare closes, so it's not about the closing time. All we do is walk down an aisle from classroom to door, not back and forth wandering around. Along the hallway, DC just wants to take a peek at the other classrooms, but we do not actually go into any of them. We only go to the reading area when it is empty. If there is a class there, we do not go. Adult area is off limits and we will work on that. I have no problem taking him straight out of the door, but he likes to go to the reading area. DC is going through the T2 phase, and I just don't know if this is the battle I should choose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the different perspectives. I pick up DC hours before the daycare closes, so it's not about the closing time. All we do is walk down an aisle from classroom to door, not back and forth wandering around. Along the hallway, DC just wants to take a peek at the other classrooms, but we do not actually go into any of them. We only go to the reading area when it is empty. If there is a class there, we do not go. Adult area is off limits and we will work on that. I have no problem taking him straight out of the door, but he likes to go to the reading area. DC is going through the T2 phase, and I just don't know if this is the battle I should choose.
Yes you should. You've been asked to take him straight out. What he likes and wants to do isn't at issue here. If the reading area is empty I would imagine the staff is expecting it to stay empty. Perhaps other kids notice him peeking in and get distracted. Really though it doesn't matter why. The center has asked you to take him straight out, so that's what you need to do.
One person told OP that it was a "safety issue". Personally, if one of my child's daycare teachers said that it was annoying/distracting/my child was making a mess, I would respect that and do as she asked. But I really dislike being told that a rule is about safety when it isn't. I would clarify with the teacher whether this is a policy or a preference and find out the reason behind it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the different perspectives. I pick up DC hours before the daycare closes, so it's not about the closing time. All we do is walk down an aisle from classroom to door, not back and forth wandering around. Along the hallway, DC just wants to take a peek at the other classrooms, but we do not actually go into any of them. We only go to the reading area when it is empty. If there is a class there, we do not go. Adult area is off limits and we will work on that. I have no problem taking him straight out of the door, but he likes to go to the reading area. DC is going through the T2 phase, and I just don't know if this is the battle I should choose.
Yes you should. You've been asked to take him straight out. What he likes and wants to do isn't at issue here. If the reading area is empty I would imagine the staff is expecting it to stay empty. Perhaps other kids notice him peeking in and get distracted. Really though it doesn't matter why. The center has asked you to take him straight out, so that's what you need to do.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the different perspectives. I pick up DC hours before the daycare closes, so it's not about the closing time. All we do is walk down an aisle from classroom to door, not back and forth wandering around. Along the hallway, DC just wants to take a peek at the other classrooms, but we do not actually go into any of them. We only go to the reading area when it is empty. If there is a class there, we do not go. Adult area is off limits and we will work on that. I have no problem taking him straight out of the door, but he likes to go to the reading area. DC is going through the T2 phase, and I just don't know if this is the battle I should choose.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the different perspectives. I pick up DC hours before the daycare closes, so it's not about the closing time. All we do is walk down an aisle from classroom to door, not back and forth wandering around. Along the hallway, DC just wants to take a peek at the other classrooms, but we do not actually go into any of them. We only go to the reading area when it is empty. If there is a class there, we do not go. Adult area is off limits and we will work on that. I have no problem taking him straight out of the door, but he likes to go to the reading area. DC is going through the T2 phase, and I just don't know if this is the battle I should choose.