Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read that language as, they want to pay a modest hourly wage (“a little extra money”), not what a nanny would charge.
It’s this. It’s code for “we’re cheap and not willing to pay market value for childcare.”
I don't think that specific language means this, but yeah, these types of posts are usually cringy and entitled for this reason.
The pay often doesn't compensate for a person's time adequately. They often post a small hourly wage and then expect someone to happily drive to their house five times a week for 10 hours of work. A college kid could instead get a weekend job and commute twice for the same pay. Obviously the details differ from posting to posting, but the trend exists.
We used to live near a very large state school. We never had a problem getting sitters for $20/hr. My understanding is that these college girls prefer babysitting gigs / part time “nanny” gigs because they make a higher hourly wage than they would elsewhere (work study at the university, fast food restaurants, retail, etc.). Our last part time “nanny” subsequently took a job on campus at the golf shop making $13/hr. There aren’t that many part time gigs for college girls that have the same flexibility and a higher rate than babysitting. But I’d love to hear more about this high paying weekend job you mention… though most college girls like their weekends for themselves, no?
Sounds like we're talking about different things. This doesn’t have the college kid language, but these are the types of ads I used to see on my college jobs board.
https://www.sittercity.com/babysitting-jobs/dc/washington/12966710?distance=25&index_in_results=0&page=1&per_page=15&search_strategy=babysitter_job&sort=post_date&zipcode=20854
Pay range starts at $15, only a couple hours a day, but several days a week and more than one kid.
I don't know what those golf shop hours look like, but I'm guessing no one expected your old sitter to spend time commuting for only $30 a day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read that language as, they want to pay a modest hourly wage (“a little extra money”), not what a nanny would charge.
It’s this. It’s code for “we’re cheap and not willing to pay market value for childcare.”
I don't think that specific language means this, but yeah, these types of posts are usually cringy and entitled for this reason.
The pay often doesn't compensate for a person's time adequately. They often post a small hourly wage and then expect someone to happily drive to their house five times a week for 10 hours of work. A college kid could instead get a weekend job and commute twice for the same pay. Obviously the details differ from posting to posting, but the trend exists.
We used to live near a very large state school. We never had a problem getting sitters for $20/hr. My understanding is that these college girls prefer babysitting gigs / part time “nanny” gigs because they make a higher hourly wage than they would elsewhere (work study at the university, fast food restaurants, retail, etc.). Our last part time “nanny” subsequently took a job on campus at the golf shop making $13/hr. There aren’t that many part time gigs for college girls that have the same flexibility and a higher rate than babysitting. But I’d love to hear more about this high paying weekend job you mention… though most college girls like their weekends for themselves, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read that language as, they want to pay a modest hourly wage (“a little extra money”), not what a nanny would charge.
It’s this. It’s code for “we’re cheap and not willing to pay market value for childcare.”
+1 the only dog whistle here is “this is a great job for someone who doesn’t need the money and won’t judge us“
Wtf? There are tons of teens who are thrilled to make $15 an hour. Retail pays way less than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As other races tend to say, 'I want someone who looks like me and reflects my culture.' So yes, I can ask that for my kids' babysitters. OP, you are way off.
It's different when you're marginalized. What a disgusting comparison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read that language as, they want to pay a modest hourly wage (“a little extra money”), not what a nanny would charge.
It’s this. It’s code for “we’re cheap and not willing to pay market value for childcare.”
+1 the only dog whistle here is “this is a great job for someone who doesn’t need the money and won’t judge us“
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read that language as, they want to pay a modest hourly wage (“a little extra money”), not what a nanny would charge.
It’s this. It’s code for “we’re cheap and not willing to pay market value for childcare.”
Anonymous wrote:Many BIPOC go to college.
Many BIPOC are SAHMs.
Maybe ask yourself why you assume educated = white?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve said that, and I didn’t mean educated. I was just looking for a few hours per week but every week, and I was trying to help people think of folks who might have a schedule that would work with what I’m looking for, so they could connect us. A full time nanny wouldn’t want the job I posted. Fortunately a few people asked their Nannies (who wanted extra hours) and a couple of SAHMs responded.