Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call it school, because it's where my 2yo has learned to count, his shapes, Spanish, etc. He has teachers there. How is this not school?
My kid learned all that and more from his nanny. We don’t call our home school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call it school, because it's where my 2yo has learned to count, his shapes, Spanish, etc. He has teachers there. How is this not school?
My kid learned all that and more from his nanny. We don’t call our home school.
Anonymous wrote:Parents feel bad about sending their kids to daycare I guess so everyone calls it “school”. I call it daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call it school, because it's where my 2yo has learned to count, his shapes, Spanish, etc. He has teachers there. How is this not school?
I tend to agree with you. When DD was an infant it was definitely 'daycare,' but now that she's two the things she learns amazes me daily: counting, colors, shapes, ABC's. And the ART - so much art. And the choreographed dances. And how to get along with others and share toys.
Her caregivers are certainly teaching her these things, so how are they not teachers?
Anonymous wrote:I call it school, because it's where my 2yo has learned to count, his shapes, Spanish, etc. He has teachers there. How is this not school?
Anonymous wrote:I call it school, because it's where my 2yo has learned to count, his shapes, Spanish, etc. He has teachers there. How is this not school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What a strange discussion. Why would anyone care what it's called?
You all have too much free time!
We should all care because there is a shame in calling it daycare where there shouldn’t be. We need to be honest about daycare in order to improve it.
The only "shame" in daycare is some random SAHM or folks with nannies trying to pretend their arrangements are better. I have never seen a parent with a kid in daycare feel guilty about it, nor should they.
Nor is there often any difference between a daycare and a preschool. My kid goes to some would call a "daycare" because it goes from infrant to pre-k. But I am quite confident the activities and "curriculum" he is doing is on par with what a "preschool" would do. Hell, even the kids who are too young for "preschool" have a ton of organized, thoughtful activities.
My conscious is quite clear.
Anonymous wrote:I actually have noticed this trend too and think it's weird. Your infant did not just "graduate" to the next classroom, stopping posting pics on FB with her "first day last day"![]()
I think it's just so people feel better about their childcare situation. No no, I'm not paying someone to just watch my kid all day, it's SCHOOL. Just starting the tiger mom frenzy earlier and earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What a strange discussion. Why would anyone care what it's called?
You all have too much free time!
We should all care because there is a shame in calling it daycare where there shouldn’t be. We need to be honest about daycare in order to improve it.
Anonymous wrote:I call it school because I want to brainwash my kids into accepting and liking that school is a part of their everyday life (they love their daycare, which is a Bright Horizons in my office building). I have zero guilt and it's not about being pretentious or pretending they're studying Shakespeare or linear algebra at ages 2 and 4 months. Plus, it's one syllable and easier to say than daycare.