Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked for Bright Horizons and I can tell you that a good Pre-school is dependent upon the teachers and if the teachers are not happy it will transfer to the children. I feel that this organization has picked up on a very lucrative need in our culture and that is of course the need for "daycare". They do follow the licensing rules and keep the children safe however, they have very little knowledge of what is developmentally appropriate for the children. The site I worked at had about 20 full time teachers and only one of which had a degree in early childhood education. I have a Masters Degree in Education and I decided to work for Bright Horizons because of a possible career path. I soon realized that the philosophy of this organization is "bottom line". I was not a good fit for this company and I definitely would not send my child to any Bright Horizon school. It's really sad that most parents are taken in by the rhetoric, the "tours" and the glossy hype of this organization.
[b[i]]As a parent, I appreciate when individuals speak the truth, regardless of how unpleasant it is to hear.[/i]
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone had any experience or heard of any experiences with Bright Horizons in Crystal City?
Anonymous wrote:NP here, and, I was shocked to read some of these reviews and cannot believe our child is at the same place that these negative reviewers describe! Our child has been at BHCC for 2.5 years, and we couldn't be happier. He started in the infant room and is now in the 2s class. The facility is bright, cheerful, clean, and the staff that we have interacted with have been warm, nurturing, well trained, and highly articulate. I can only imagine that a disgruntled former employee is writing some of this garbage. The school is NAECYC certified, which is not common for this area, and takes it's staff and training very seriously. It's expensive, yes, but we think worth every cent. We have found the director and assistant director to be professional, courteous, and responsive to our concerns and suggestions. Yes, it is a corporate center and is run as such, but we don't care so long as our son receives loving and nuturing, consistent care. He is also thriving in the preschool more-academic areas. I hope that anyone interested in BHCC will visit and make your own opinions. It's a wonderful place, and we have been happy!
Anonymous wrote:I worked for Bright Horizons and I can tell you that a good Pre-school is dependent upon the teachers and if the teachers are not happy it will transfer to the children. I feel that this organization has picked up on a very lucrative need in our culture and that is of course the need for "daycare". They do follow the licensing rules and keep the children safe however, they have very little knowledge of what is developmentally appropriate for the children. The site I worked at had about 20 full time teachers and only one of which had a degree in early childhood education. I have a Masters Degree in Education and I decided to work for Bright Horizons because of a possible career path. I soon realized that the philosophy of this organization is "bottom line". I was not a good fit for this company and I definitely would not send my child to any Bright Horizon school. It's really sad that most parents are taken in by the rhetoric, the "tours" and the glossy hype of this organization.
Anonymous wrote:I worked for Bright Horizons and I can tell you that a good Pre-school is dependent upon the teachers and if the teachers are not happy it will transfer to the children. I feel that this organization has picked up on a very lucrative need in our culture and that is of course the need for "daycare". They do follow the licensing rules and keep the children safe however, they have very little knowledge of what is developmentally appropriate for the children. The site I worked at had about 20 full time teachers and only one of which had a degree in early childhood education. I have a Masters Degree in Education and I decided to work for Bright Horizons because of a possible career path. I soon realized that the philosophy of this organization is "bottom line". I was not a good fit for this company and I definitely would not send my child to any Bright Horizon school. It's really sad that most parents are taken in by the rhetoric, the "tours" and the glossy hype of this organization.
Anonymous wrote:Wow!!! Some individuals make it seem like the BHCC center is the most incompetent, ghetto center on the planet. For previous comments, several dates, that you have typed comments on don't match up with the employees working at BHCC. Example Marie Bennett, Raquel and the tall person in toddler room, these individuals haven't worked in the center in almost a year. And yes I will agree that is a lot of changes that could be made at the center. But some of the comments are quite offensive, especially when you work with a child 8 hours a day 5 days a week. And to the individual that thinks that the employees have to many days off because of holidays or federal days off. Well sorry that it is a inconvenience to you. I guess employees don't deserve a day off. First of all sometime we are treated like we are maids, and nannies (from the days of slavery) we are disrespected from families and administration, are wages don't reflect what the families pay. But in all we are still here. Majority of us have went to school and received our degrees and highly trained for what we do. I can't speak up on the employees that don't do there job , but guess what you have employees like that all over including where you work. So don't disrespect us celebrate us, you are on the outside looking in not on the inside looking out, And you probably can't do what we do for a minute. I say thank you for all the families that love us and celebrate us and for all you others I can't say, maybe one day you will learn to appreciate us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they were very difficult to deal with pre-admissions. I got different answers regarding the waiting list from different people and they seemed very cold and "corporate". I got the distinct impression that they did not care about the child and only cared about money.
Could not be more true.
My child was there for two years, so I will vouch for this. They are a corporations with traded shares first and foremost, and a family solutions center secondly. They hire lead teachers with degrees and the majority else are barely HS graduates. That wouldn't be a big deal except that the curriculum they throw at you is implemented by the masses of teachers, one of whom wrote "Today we be carvin punkins" on my child's information sheet. I saved that, since that was what my $1800 bought me.
You can't 'make' employees love or want to invest in your child, since so many of them come from places in D.C. that would break your heart. While their children are in third-rate daycares or with family members who don't provide the structured activities their mother is supposed to be giving your child, your 'stranger' child lives a molly-coddled life that most of these women can only dream of. The only individuals who can often afford benefits like healthcare are lead teachers, who have degrees. One employee from the toddlers room put it this way during an argument with a fellow employee "Why you be all up on me for doing my thing when no one be givin us nothin when we kids?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they were very difficult to deal with pre-admissions. I got different answers regarding the waiting list from different people and they seemed very cold and "corporate". I got the distinct impression that they did not care about the child and only cared about money.
Could not be more true.