Anonymous wrote:While I think that being a great nanny is about, most importantly, being a Pied Piper with children and have the heart of a teacher - a college degree is also important. Education and experience are the two keys to being a professional nanny.
Anonymous wrote:I agree wholeheartedly w/you on this one OP. 120%.
Taking all the Child Development courses in the world do not make a great nanny.
I much prefer a nanny who has "real-life/hands-on" experience w/young children vs. someone who simply studied the developmental stages from a textbook.
And personality is at the top of my list since w/out good chemistry, it is nearly impossible for any nanny position to work out since chemistry is such an important factor here.
Anonymous wrote:
"A professional knows how to do her job."
Most parents here don't need or want a professional nanny, not can they afford one.
Find a new line. This one is old and you're embarrassing yourself.Anonymous wrote:
"A professional knows how to do her job."
Most parents here don't need or want a professional nanny, not can they afford one.
Anonymous wrote:I liked it better when you told us all to wake up and smell the coffee each time you posted. At least I got a good laugh...
Anonymous wrote:This is not about salary
You dont need classes or a degree to take care of children. Moms (and dads) all over the world do it and many of them do it very well with no prior experience or training. Yes, when you hire someone you should consider whether they have the personality and knowledge to do the work, but you certainly dont need a degree to be a nanny. I have my degree in early childhood education and learned absolutely nothing about caring for a baby, though I can tell you all about preschool ideologies.
Its great to hire someone with experience taking care of kids, but truthfully, you need to be loving, caring, kind, patient, and level-headed to care for children. Keep kids safe, loved, and reasonably stimulated and none of that is taught in any school.