Anonymous wrote:Same reason daycares in Crystal City have a hard time staffing quality people at the corporate daycares. Only the true workforce dregs will take daycare worker pay in those areas. And In Alexandria you are getting uneducated, non-English speaking immigrants or poor black women from the nearby public housing.
Anonymous wrote:Not a popular opinion but I live in the area and kind of knew that this would happen at the daycare.
Hiring decent daycare staff in this area is tough. The owner really would have to make a serious, concerted effort to weed out staff and then implement a very serious training environment for teachers and be very rigorous in observing, following up and letting go of teachers.
I can't believe you think the biting is the parents fault. I'm pretty sure if the parents were in the room, watching the child for signs and correcting the child immediately, the biting would have stopped much earlier. It is the fault of the teachers in the room, not the parents
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe they left that toddler in the high chair for two hours! That is child abuse.
Yes my child is in that class and I know this situation because I spent lots of time in that class what I observed was a "busy" toddler who did nothing but bite in that classroom, the teachers did all they could do they shadow him made him their special friend etc.. from what I observed the days I was there he bit at least 4 times a day so the teacher in the class placed him in the high chair with crayons and paper and different activities, although the child in a high chair sounds bad the child was not in any danger nor upset. The only thing wrong in this situation is that the owner should have terminated that family after the first bite!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe they left that toddler in the high chair for two hours! That is child abuse.
Yes my child is in that class and I know this situation because I spent lots of time in that class what I observed was a "busy" toddler who did nothing but bite in that classroom, the teachers did all they could do they shadow him made him their special friend etc.. from what I observed the days I was there he bit at least 4 times a day so the teacher in the class placed him in the high chair with crayons and paper and different activities, although the child in a high chair sounds bad the child was not in any danger nor upset. The only thing wrong in this situation is that the owner should have terminated that family after the first bite!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:17:08 and 16:51 sound like the same poster. And the grammar/syntax is more like a daycare employee than a middle class parent.
If they can't care for a child without restraining him in a high chair all afternoon, they should have the parents find other care.
17:08 and 16:51 on what page? I scrolled through a bit and can't fine what you are referring to
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe they left that toddler in the high chair for two hours! That is child abuse.
Yes my child is in that class and I know this situation because I spent lots of time in that class what I observed was a "busy" toddler who did nothing but bite in that classroom, the teachers did all they could do they shadow him made him their special friend etc.. from what I observed the days I was there he bit at least 4 times a day so the teacher in the class placed him in the high chair with crayons and paper and different activities, although the child in a high chair sounds bad the child was not in any danger nor upset. The only thing wrong in this situation is that the owner should have terminated that family after the first bite!
I'm a PP and my kid was in that classroom, too. She was bitten several times by that kid. I'm totally with you that the owner should have dealt with this long before she did. According to the inspection reports that kid bit others 18 times (!) I didn't spend time in the room like you so I didn't realize they had given him things to do in the high chair. IMO, keeping him in there for an extended period of time was not the way to handle the situation. I totally understand why his parents got upset about that. He needed to be expelled if his parents couldn't stop the biting.
Also, I liked Discovery Time and I like the owner. I felt sorry for her because right after she opened the place a relative got ill and she was the primary caregiver. So it's conceivable that much of this happened because she physically just couldn't be around as much as she needed to be. As someone who's also been responsible for caring for an elderly relative, I have tremendous sympathy for her situation. Problem is, you're paying a premium to put your kid there ($1600+ monthly in toddler room) and for that kind of money, you don't expect these kinds of issues.
I do hope all of this gets resolved and the daycare is a success.
Anonymous wrote:17:08 and 16:51 sound like the same poster. And the grammar/syntax is more like a daycare employee than a middle class parent.
If they can't care for a child without restraining him in a high chair all afternoon, they should have the parents find other care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe they left that toddler in the high chair for two hours! That is child abuse.
Yes my child is in that class and I know this situation because I spent lots of time in that class what I observed was a "busy" toddler who did nothing but bite in that classroom, the teachers did all they could do they shadow him made him their special friend etc.. from what I observed the days I was there he bit at least 4 times a day so the teacher in the class placed him in the high chair with crayons and paper and different activities, although the child in a high chair sounds bad the child was not in any danger nor upset. The only thing wrong in this situation is that the owner should have terminated that family after the first bite!
I'm a PP and my kid was in that classroom, too. She was bitten several times by that kid. I'm totally with you that the owner should have dealt with this long before she did. According to the inspection reports that kid bit others 18 times (!) I didn't spend time in the room like you so I didn't realize they had given him things to do in the high chair. IMO, keeping him in there for an extended period of time was not the way to handle the situation. I totally understand why his parents got upset about that. He needed to be expelled if his parents couldn't stop the biting.
Also, I liked Discovery Time and I like the owner. I felt sorry for her because right after she opened the place a relative got ill and she was the primary caregiver. So it's conceivable that much of this happened because she physically just couldn't be around as much as she needed to be. As someone who's also been responsible for caring for an elderly relative, I have tremendous sympathy for her situation. Problem is, you're paying a premium to put your kid there ($1600+ monthly in toddler room) and for that kind of money, you don't expect these kinds of issues.
I do hope all of this gets resolved and the daycare is a success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe they left that toddler in the high chair for two hours! That is child abuse.
Yes my child is in that class and I know this situation because I spent lots of time in that class what I observed was a "busy" toddler who did nothing but bite in that classroom, the teachers did all they could do they shadow him made him their special friend etc.. from what I observed the days I was there he bit at least 4 times a day so the teacher in the class placed him in the high chair with crayons and paper and different activities, although the child in a high chair sounds bad the child was not in any danger nor upset. The only thing wrong in this situation is that the owner should have terminated that family after the first bite!