Anonymous wrote:
There is also the fact that you seem to be acting as a go-between for her, which suggests either that her language skills aren't great, or she's not able to use technology well.
We hired an older nanny for our 3 kids because we thought that she'd be more likely to have patience and would be more responsible. Having said that, I strongly doubt that I would have considered any nanny who had her daughter acting as a go-between. The candidate would have to be over-the-top amazing in every other way to make up for my concerns over that situation.
There is also the fact that you seem to be acting as a go-between for her, which suggests either that her language skills aren't great, or she's not able to use technology well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With her experience and age, she would be a wonderful companion for seniors. I assume she can drive and is in good shape physically.
Yes, she is looking into that now with the Home Health Aide cert. But she absolutely loves babies, our house is sometimes full with God children, cousins and grand kids. Just imagine the running, food and mess.lol. She adores them, so its hard for her to pull away from being a Nanny.
Anonymous wrote:With her experience and age, she would be a wonderful companion for seniors. I assume she can drive and is in good shape physically.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 1 yr old and 3 yr old and specifically wanted a young nanny who can dash into the street if needed, and who can run around all afternoon. I also didn't want someone who has tons of experience and would think their experience trumps what I want done. So I looked for someone with enough experience to know this is what they want to do, but not decades of experience.
Also, why do you say your mother wants $18 an hour but that's negotiable, but then won't negotiate down to $15? Just say then that she wants to be paid $16-18 or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:I think her age is probably a major factor. People worry about the stamina, health, and "fun factor" of an older nanny. For better or worse, people also have a hard time hiring someone older than themselves that they will have to manage as an employee, or might have to let go at some point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think her age is probably a major factor. People worry about the stamina, health, and "fun factor" of an older nanny. For better or worse, people also have a hard time hiring someone older than themselves that they will have to manage as an employee, or might have to let go at some point.
There is also the fact that you seem to be acting as a go-between for her, which suggests either that her language skills aren't great, or she's not able to use technology well.
How has she found jobs in the past?
MB here and I agree with this, especially the bolded section.
We hired an older nanny for our babies, and she was terrific. But her language skills were a bigger barrier as the kids got older. So in subsequent hires we were much less flexible on requiring true fluency in English - both written and verbal. At $18/hr parents will be interviewing a pretty wide range of people so they may be tipped easily in a different direction by fluency, more recent employment, perceptions of age/stamina/energy level, etc...
See what you can do in terms of local listservs, parenting groups, etc... - my best leads have always come from other parents (rather than DCUM or care.com or those kinds of places.) So maybe you can get some traction if you get people to put a note up on neighborhood listservs, or your mom can offer to be a vacation nanny or something like that until she finds full-time employment.
I definitely understand where you are coming from. She is fluent in English and her writing skills are of a Junior in High School. So I believe she is decent, but she prefers new-borns to infants and I don't think her writing skills are necessary during that age or is it? I am really trying to get as much feedback as I can to help her out. But thank you so much for your suggestions. I really appreciate it.
I just hired a new nanny last month and it's pretty competitive out there at the $18/hr level. There are lots of people looking for work, so your mom is experiencing the hard side of that.
Anonymous wrote:I think her age is probably a major factor. People worry about the stamina, health, and "fun factor" of an older nanny. For better or worse, people also have a hard time hiring someone older than themselves that they will have to manage as an employee, or might have to let go at some point.
There is also the fact that you seem to be acting as a go-between for her, which suggests either that her language skills aren't great, or she's not able to use technology well.
How has she found jobs in the past?
Anonymous wrote:I think her age is probably a major factor. People worry about the stamina, health, and "fun factor" of an older nanny. For better or worse, people also have a hard time hiring someone older than themselves that they will have to manage as an employee, or might have to let go at some point.
There is also the fact that you seem to be acting as a go-between for her, which suggests either that her language skills aren't great, or she's not able to use technology well.
How has she found jobs in the past?