Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in daycares during college. Until you spend all day/every day at them, you have NO WAY of knowing what goes on there when parents aren't around.
+1
Duh, says everyone. That said, I'm pretty sure my spunky, happy kid who runs into his teacher's arms everyday isn't being abused. If he is, shame on me.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the daycare people are here posing as "parents." No body gets this defensive about a good experience at a daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone actually eat bon-bons?
I actually find bon-bons rather insipid. Neuhaus does a very fine champagne truffle. Any time I decide to while away a few pleasant hours with my children safely filed away with their minimum wage caretakers, I never recline on my settee without a nice assortment of Belgian confectionery to ameliorate my ennui.
Nice to see you are putting your MRS degree with a minor in English Lit to good use.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in daycares during college. Until you spend all day/every day at them, you have NO WAY of knowing what goes on there when parents aren't around.
+1
Duh, says everyone. That said, I'm pretty sure my spunky, happy kid who runs into his teacher's arms everyday isn't being abused. If he is, shame on me.
I have a kid in daycare. There is a huge continuum from "being abused" to "neglect leading to detergent swallowing" to "benign neglect" to "lukewarm supervision" to "acceptable engagement" to "well-cared for." I think most of us are probably getting care for our kids in the middle range.
+1000
This is reality. Daycare is not perfect care, hopefully it's safe care. If you are expecting daycare to be like Disneyland everyday, you are being unrealistic. These people don't love your kids, they get tired and overwhelmed by the stress of the job day in and day out. Like you would.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone actually eat bon-bons?
I actually find bon-bons rather insipid. Neuhaus does a very fine champagne truffle. Any time I decide to while away a few pleasant hours with my children safely filed away with their minimum wage caretakers, I never recline on my settee without a nice assortment of Belgian confectionery to ameliorate my ennui.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone actually eat bon-bons?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another Simon Center parent and supporter here. The OP sounds a bit unhinged.
Dude, you are LYING. There is no sane parent on earth who would think it's okay to hand a child laundry detergent.
How about we give your kid a drawer of sharp knives to play with? I think you should be reported to CPS for even suggesting this behavior is okay. You clearly aren't an adequate parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in daycares during college. Until you spend all day/every day at them, you have NO WAY of knowing what goes on there when parents aren't around.
+1
Duh, says everyone. That said, I'm pretty sure my spunky, happy kid who runs into his teacher's arms everyday isn't being abused. If he is, shame on me.
I have a kid in daycare. There is a huge continuum from "being abused" to "neglect leading to detergent swallowing" to "benign neglect" to "lukewarm supervision" to "acceptable engagement" to "well-cared for." I think most of us are probably getting care for our kids in the middle range.
Anonymous wrote:I hate to say this but, if you put your kid in daycare or hire a nanny, they are not going to treat your kid like you do. You can't accept abuse, but they are going to do some things that you are not going to like. It's a stressful low paying job and they are human.
I have seen and heard of a lot of careless and mean things that daycare workers and nannies do to kids. It happens everywhere. If you can't accept the good with the bad, then be a stay at home parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in daycares during college. Until you spend all day/every day at them, you have NO WAY of knowing what goes on there when parents aren't around.
+1. I swore then that my kids would never spend so much as an hour in daycare. I've seen too much horrific stuff in too many "great daycares". I wouldn't leave a young child with a nanny either. Some things are just not worth the risk.
I"ve never worked in daycare, but my office overlooks an purportedly well respected day care facility. I have plenty of opportunity to observe the daycare workers interacting with the kids. I'm sure the parents of many of those kids also swear that those workers love their kids--and I"m sure that they do like them, but some of the behaviour is pretty eye-opening.
This is true. Of course people who put their children in daycare feel that the providers love their children. The parents need to feel that way so that they can feel good about the choice they have made for their child.
Similarly, some women argue that all daycares are terrible to justify their life of bon-bons and tele-novelas while they are supposefly minding the children.
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Seriously, though, the truth is in the middle.