Anonymous wrote: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.
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Anonymous wrote: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.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the daycare people are here posing as "parents." No body gets this defensive about a good experience at a daycare.
Don't think giving a 16 mo old detergent is acceptable. Preposterous. Who cares if he actually drank it?
Actually we ARE legit parents at the Simon Center. If you re-read, the detergent incident was NOT at the Simon Center. Nobody is here defending the alleged detergent incident at Bright Horizons. The parents commenting are with the Simon Center. Sounds like you must not make friends with you children's classmates' parents? Word does travel fast among a close knit community, so of course people might be flocking here to read this and want to weigh in. Have you not thought that we've already spoken with the administration about these alleged incidents and have heard the OTHER side of the story. One that also deserves a voice, yet sadly won't ever really get one.
Anonymous wrote:It's amazing that all these positive Simon Center parents found this thread.
I'm sure there's two sides to these stories.
Yes, sometimes less-than-intelligent people make terrible decisions at daycare.
Also, sometimes parents get a tiny snapshot out of context and over-react.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the daycare people are here posing as "parents." No body gets this defensive about a good experience at a daycare.
Don't think giving a 16 mo old detergent is acceptable. Preposterous. Who cares if he actually drank it?
Actually we ARE legit parents at the Simon Center. If you re-read, the detergent incident was NOT at the Simon Center. Nobody is here defending the alleged detergent incident at Bright Horizons. The parents commenting are with the Simon Center. Sounds like you must not make friends with you children's classmates' parents? Word does travel fast among a close knit community, so of course people might be flocking here to read this and want to weigh in. Have you not thought that we've already spoken with the administration about these alleged incidents and have heard the OTHER side of the story. One that also deserves a voice, yet sadly won't ever really get one.[/quote
Hahahaha LIAR. This is Simon Center admin posing as parents. Nice job genius, you just made yourself look like an ass. Next time find a better poser to write a post for you that isn't tinged with anger and defensiveness regarding someone's child having a bad experience.
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.