Anonymous wrote:My kid is 13, CPR trained, and makes $15 an hour.
Anonymous wrote:Look-- I'm not OP, but I've found that the amount AU students request is not at all connected to their childcare experience or education.
In fact, it seems like it must have more to do with whether or not they have previously fallen into lucky situations working for families earning money on a for-profit order of magnitude themselves who don't mind padding their sitters' pay because it's all small change to them.
A few of these students have merely benefited from lawyer/lobbyist largesse in the past and are asking. Many more very nice girls with entirely equivalent qualifications will swarm OP's inbox with eager responses when she posts offering a more modest rate.
I work with undergraduates and have come to believe that many of them are inclined to overestimate their value to employers and potential employers. They're going to face a sobering wake-up call very soon if present economic circumstances continue!
Remain confounded (sounds like it might be a natural state for you). Yes, some sitters require and MAKE $17 an hour.They just aren't making it working for YOU. A bunch of folks wouldn't be advertising those rates if they were completely unrealistic. However, you can certainly hire a sitter for less, much less if your standards are low. Let me let you in on a little secret-people work to make a living, not to make life more convenient for you.Anonymous wrote:This is OP back again. To be clear, I'm looking for a 1x a month babysitter for a school-aged child who teaches me how to program the TV and can heat up a simple meal for himself.
I'm sure it's a very riveting policy debate, this question of how much we ought to pay full-time nannies who care for our young infants 50 hrs a week, and how strong their English skills are. But it's irrelevant!
I have a confession, which is that I work a part-time night/weekend job to have extra $ for silly things. THe job was competitive to get and it requires moderate office skills. Usually, a parent or grandparent happily, willingly watches our child when I'm at that job.
Once or twice a month, I need a babysitter to watch the kid when his dad or grandma isn't available. It confounds me off that I'm expected to pay a 19 yr old $20 an hour to watch my kid while I go make $16 an hour.
Having been a teen and college babysitter myself, and now doing this part-time job I have, I can confidently say which one requires much more skill and mental dexterity.
Once or twice a month, I need a babysitter to watch the kid when his dad or grandma isn't available. It confounds me off that I'm expected to pay a 19 yr old $20 an hour to watch my kid while I go make $16 an hour.
Having been a teen and college babysitter myself, and now doing this part-time job I have, I can confidently say which one requires much more skill and mental dexterity.
Anonymous wrote:The market will bear what the market will bear. You can't blame the babysitters for asking if that is what people are paying.
Anonymous wrote:The market will bear what the market will bear. You can't blame the babysitters for asking if that is what people are paying.