Anonymous wrote:To the nannies and parents that intervene are you comfortable with another nanny or mom correcting your child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Constant mediation and adult intervention can be an issue too.
Our kids are losing social skills and peer to peer interaction s that are important in development thanks to constant adult intervention.
When you constantly helicopter you are teaching a child they cannot do and solve a problem on their own, and that your feelings on a situation matter more than their own.
Our children and charges LEARN social skills and peer-to-peer interaction. Neither are innate. Your point is well founded AFTER the child starts kindergarten when the children will sort it out and deal with the "offender" generally by refusing to play with him/her. I totally disagree that young children (under three) should be left to the fend for themselves in a face of a bullying older child.
And too often being anti-helicoptering is used as a justification for simply being lazy.
I'm a nanny and I always step in and protect or correct my charges in play groups and parks.
Having a toy taken away is not always bullying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Constant mediation and adult intervention can be an issue too.
Our kids are losing social skills and peer to peer interaction s that are important in development thanks to constant adult intervention.
When you constantly helicopter you are teaching a child they cannot do and solve a problem on their own, and that your feelings on a situation matter more than their own.
Our children and charges LEARN social skills and peer-to-peer interaction. Neither are innate. Your point is well founded AFTER the child starts kindergarten when the children will sort it out and deal with the "offender" generally by refusing to play with him/her. I totally disagree that young children (under three) should be left to the fend for themselves in a face of a bullying older child.
And too often being anti-helicoptering is used as a justification for simply being lazy.
I'm a nanny and I always step in and protect or correct my charges in play groups and parks.
Anonymous wrote:Constant mediation and adult intervention can be an issue too.
Our kids are losing social skills and peer to peer interaction s that are important in development thanks to constant adult intervention.
When you constantly helicopter you are teaching a child they cannot do and solve a problem on their own, and that your feelings on a situation matter more than their own.
Anonymous wrote:Nanny here, and yes I would step in if it is clear that the other mom or nanny isn't going to. My concern is for my charge, and what am I teaching her if I sit back and let someone treat her like crap? As she gets older I will teach her how to negotiate these situations herself with the other kid, but for now it's my job to stick up for her. Of course I would do so gently, and maybe encourage them to play with it together, but yes I am going to say something. I could give a rats ass if someone wants to catch an attitude. Maybe watch your kid, and I won't have to.