Anonymous wrote:Hi there,
Thanks for all replies, I am the op. I just had another interview with the family. I thought I am going to meet kids only. Since, I already had interview. The secand interview was with grandma.lol. Who asked me stupid questions.
I never had been asked that stupid questions.
I came to know there will be three children not two. One of them will be come from school at 1.30 . So he will be my responsibility as will till 6.00.
They didn’t mentioned when they had first interview with me
I don’t think it’s wroth to work on that kind of environment.
I know $6600 monthly is very good amount . But taking care of three kids and dealing with stupid grandma is not good idea. It’s not wroth it. There was cam every where. The kids were very active and not obedient.
6600 per month? Actually it's more.
Wage = rate (40 + 1.5*overtime)
You said $30 as the rate and 50 hours per the OP.
So: 30(40+1.5*10)=30(40+15)=30*55=1,650 per week
1650*52 weeks/12 months= $85,800 per year/12 months= $7,150 average per month
I think you're a fool to turn this down, or a troll looking to stir up a fight.
$30 base rate and 10 hours of overtime at $45 every week? That's a great position, especially if you've never done a share before! Negotiate what you need though.
Agreed, grandma has no business being there everyday. She's only grandma for one family, not both, she doesn't need to hang around and favor her grandkid.
Third child could be okay. Who brings him home from school, the nanny? That means structuring naptime in such a way that the younger kids aren't woken up, and it may mean putting all three down after picking up the third from preschool. Doable, but I'd want parents onboard with the schedule and continuing on the weekend.
If you would be working 8-6, would you also do preschool drop off?
Walking, bus, metro or car for pickup? If car, they need to provide a car to fit three seats if yours doesn't. Either way, they provide car seats.
Cameras are actually good, at least in my opinion. It allows the parents to see what happened with toddlers careening around and getting hurt, protecting you.
They're toddlers. They're not going to be sedentary, they're supposed to be active. And toddlers want to be independent, so it's up to the parents and nanny to teach them limits to the independence. Blind obedience won't happen, but they are very motivated to please adults.
You said you're used to a different age. I'm guessing school age? Toddlers are very different, and it takes a very different skill set. Frankly, I'm not sure you're the right fit for these families, but if they're offering $30/ hour and don't care about English fluency/accuracy, they won't have a problem finding someone.