Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell me more about cons of a nanny, pls, except cost. Not talking about a young person in the park bringing your kid to the park for 10-15 min, then strapping them back in the stroller and heading for the mall with friends, but "the real thing". The one who arrives on time every day, does planned activities, goes to the park for 2 hrs, then hot lunch and a nap, who adores your child and they love her back. So, what are the cons?
You as the parent are solely responsible for hiring and managing this person who may or may not deliver what they promise. In a child care center, a director hires and oversees staff, takes care of background checks and gets checked on by licensing.
You are relying on one person who can get sick and is entitled to take time off. In a good child care center they have extra staff to ensure compliance with ratios when staff are out sick.
Your children will be in your home with you if you work from home. If your children are at daycare then your home will be much quieter.
I think you’re overestimating what this entails. I doubt it’s that different than communications with a daycare center. We have a great nanny and the employer aspect has never been a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell me more about cons of a nanny, pls, except cost. Not talking about a young person in the park bringing your kid to the park for 10-15 min, then strapping them back in the stroller and heading for the mall with friends, but "the real thing". The one who arrives on time every day, does planned activities, goes to the park for 2 hrs, then hot lunch and a nap, who adores your child and they love her back. So, what are the cons?
You as the parent are solely responsible for hiring and managing this person who may or may not deliver what they promise. In a child care center, a director hires and oversees staff, takes care of background checks and gets checked on by licensing.
You are relying on one person who can get sick and is entitled to take time off. In a good child care center they have extra staff to ensure compliance with ratios when staff are out sick.
Your children will be in your home with you if you work from home. If your children are at daycare then your home will be much quieter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She saw nannies at the park every day and found the majority to be mediocre (did not speak to the kid, watched movies on their phone, gossiped with other nannies while leaving babies strapped in strollers) or downright negligent (my mom interfered multiple times to help young toddlers in her vicinity whose nannies weren't paying attention).
You think that's not happening in daycare?
Anonymous wrote:She saw nannies at the park every day and found the majority to be mediocre (did not speak to the kid, watched movies on their phone, gossiped with other nannies while leaving babies strapped in strollers) or downright negligent (my mom interfered multiple times to help young toddlers in her vicinity whose nannies weren't paying attention).
Anonymous wrote:I as a parent will strive to do a good job hiring and work diligently with my selected agency, while most directors cannot care less who they hire as long as the workers keep coming (and leaving), and we are not talking about quality teachers here. Anyone - literally, anyone - can get hired to work in a center, and this is unfortunately the reality in this industry, and the cause of high turnover.
Anonymous wrote:Tell me more about cons of a nanny, pls, except cost. Not talking about a young person in the park bringing your kid to the park for 10-15 min, then strapping them back in the stroller and heading for the mall with friends, but "the real thing". The one who arrives on time every day, does planned activities, goes to the park for 2 hrs, then hot lunch and a nap, who adores your child and they love her back. So, what are the cons?