Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sympathetic, OP, but am confused as to why you are so against hiring someone to help out. Why is sending the two youngest to a center better than having someone at your house to make sure all 4 are online and doing school?
I think the younger two may need more structure outside of the house and better data speeds. Based on some of these posts in these forums, I don’t exactly trust nannies anymore anyway. Four school aged kids really isn’t hard to handle during the day, but four school aged kids trying to sort through broken links and frozen zoom sessions becomes a non stop job.
I think we have a plan. We are going to have to two youngest in care and the older kids will need to keep a checklist when they can’t get into a class. I don’t think this is a wonderful year for education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so your suggestion is what? Give up work and lose the income?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4 kids? I’m sorry, but I think you need to hire support.
Or learn to be parents.
With four kids, yes, or hire a nanny.
I don’t trust a nanny with my kids. Never have. I’m not sure why a nanny would be better qualified to juggle the 4 of them with eLearning than I would. I may send the youngest two to a childcare eLearning program when I am at work.
First of all, the 3 older kids don't need help. Maybe even your 6th grader doesn't need much help either. Get a babysitter to help the youngest kid. You make it sound like you have babies and toddlers as well as ES aged kids. The oldest 2 or 3 can do this alone. I used to nanny for 4 kids and the ages of these kids sound like a cakewalk.
One of my older kids is autistic and I think needs someone there more often. He’s pretty independent but he needs some guidance.
We plan on sending the younger two to a virtual learning center and checking in with my oldest more often. Friday was very frustrating because of the data speed anyway.
Anonymous wrote:OP- Yes, it is only a problem for you and other parents who are failures to their kids. Teachers and schools have no responsibility to help you or your kids during a pandemic. Any reasonable parent would have a 5 year cash reserve fund, and hire a pod teacher to help the nanny and housekeeper they should already have. Teachers should only have to worry about their own health. You should be enormously greatful for any time they're willing to give to your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Your older kids need to be more disciplined or suffer consequences. The fact that they aren’t means there was a problem before the pandemic that is now manifesting itself. I’m not trying to come down on you - I’m saying your kids are old enough to be more self sufficient than they are, which would take the best of if you and give you breathing room. They are old enough.
Don’t make the same mistake with the youngest - the fact that he’s “refusing” to log on is an indication that he thinks that in your household he CAN refuse. That in and of itself is unusual your child should have a healthy amount of respect for your authority and an accompanying level of obedience that he should not be able to tell you, the parent, what he is not going to do at all of nine years old.
Anonymous wrote:The issue is you are not used to caring four your 4 kids all at once every day. Suck it up. We are great with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so your suggestion is what? Give up work and lose the income?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4 kids? I’m sorry, but I think you need to hire support.
Or learn to be parents.
With four kids, yes, or hire a nanny.
I don’t trust a nanny with my kids. Never have. I’m not sure why a nanny would be better qualified to juggle the 4 of them with eLearning than I would. I may send the youngest two to a childcare eLearning program when I am at work.
First of all, the 3 older kids don't need help. Maybe even your 6th grader doesn't need much help either. Get a babysitter to help the youngest kid. You make it sound like you have babies and toddlers as well as ES aged kids. The oldest 2 or 3 can do this alone. I used to nanny for 4 kids and the ages of these kids sound like a cakewalk.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sympathetic, OP, but am confused as to why you are so against hiring someone to help out. Why is sending the two youngest to a center better than having someone at your house to make sure all 4 are online and doing school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue is you are not used to caring four your 4 kids all at once every day. Suck it up. We are great with it.
We includes you and a partner who both work full time? Because, I'd be fine with it if I didn't have a job but I do and I take it seriously (as I should). I don't think anyone would be able to handle virtual learning for 4 children and working and feel it was going well.
Yes, my husband and I are federal workers whose buildings are now open again. We have no telework options. My kids are older (4th, 6th, 7th and 10th) but we can’t trust them to log in daily without someone home managing it all day. We were home in the spring. We aren’t now since work has reopened.
I was trying to avoid childcare but it appears the rest of the county has been doing great with eLearning and I’m not overly sure my kids have been able to make all their classes. They aren’t getting marked absent so I guess that’s something.
This little one HATES it and is refusing to turn her camera on. At some point, I think we are going to call it and send the youngest to a virtual
Learning daycare because this isn’t getting easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so your suggestion is what? Give up work and lose the income?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4 kids? I’m sorry, but I think you need to hire support.
Or learn to be parents.
With four kids, yes, or hire a nanny.
I don’t trust a nanny with my kids. Never have. I’m not sure why a nanny would be better qualified to juggle the 4 of them with eLearning than I would. I may send the youngest two to a childcare eLearning program when I am at work.