Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Great. So answer the question: What do working parents do for childcare?
It's been answered repeatedly--they choose programs that don't close as often, usually called "daycares" rather than "preschools." The curriculum is often quite similar, but a daycare program will close less often because it's also explicitly serving as child care for working parents.
And it usually costs a lot more.
That was not our experience. Costs were comparable, hours were longer and there were very few days off each year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
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Even if you are a SAHM, school IS childcare for small children. SAHMs run errands while their kids are in school, or do things around the house, or focus on babies. SAHMs do not wait outside the school with their car running for the entirely of school.
Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Anonymous wrote:No idea.
What annoys me most are the obnoxious posters on this site who excoriate worried parents before snow days about how they should have a couple of back-up plans always in place.
As if most families could afford that or have a family/friends network in place.
Anonymous wrote:In the summer we put our child in camp - there are a few starting at age 3. During the year, we were fortunate to have flexible schedules to work from home or take the day off. If you don't have that flexibility, I would look into daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Full day preschools rarely have this many days off. My preschool has:
1 week in August
2 parent-teacher conference days
1 teacher development day
All Federal Holidays
3 early release days - Good Friday, NYE, day before Thanksgiving.
This is still more days off than when we were at a large center where conferences happened in the evening and they did Development on Columbus Day.
The only schools I’ve seen have so many days off as you describe are Montessori schools. Unfortunately the Montessori philosophy is not compatible with being a working parent unless you also have a nanny or au pair. Some schools begrudgingly offer before and after care to make it a full day, but still run a very abbreviated calendar.
Depends on your kid and your job on how you handle it. I work from home and my 4yr old is great at independent play. On days like parent conferences, I buy a new $10-20 Lego set and that buys me 3-4 hours of work time. I work longer the night before and that evening to make up the extra hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Great. So answer the question: What do working parents do for childcare?
It's been answered repeatedly--they choose programs that don't close as often, usually called "daycares" rather than "preschools." The curriculum is often quite similar, but a daycare program will close less often because it's also explicitly serving as child care for working parents.
And it usually costs a lot more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is not child care
Great. So answer the question: What do working parents do for childcare?