Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awww I’m sorry. I do understand though. If you want to keep her, maybe you could download Google Translate and communicate via text in Spanish?
If you really can’t get past the language barrier, then sit her down and tell her. Be generous with her severance if you can. Maybe offer to help find her a job with parents who speak Spanish.
I know it seems daunting but this does happen. You and she will both come out ok.
My main concern is that you cannot fire someone due to them speaking another language. So I need to approach it very carefully, even though it really has nothing to do with the fact she speaks Spanish. It has everything to do with the fact that she isn't doing her job correctly and it's impacting my son. That is why I'm concerned and was seeking advice from this forum.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - honestly, it really has been difficult. I can see how it should have been easy to tell the language barrier, but it wasn't because I had no issues communicating in the interview, when we negotiated our agreement, etc. Sometimes we have back and forth conversations with no issue. And then other times, I am like "can you please take him to the park this morning and then back here for lunch at 11:45" and she will be like "okay sure, no problem" and the next thing I know, it is an hour later and they are just playing in his room. A large part of me thinks she is just not listening and is pretending she doesn't understand.
Anonymous wrote:Awww I’m sorry. I do understand though. If you want to keep her, maybe you could download Google Translate and communicate via text in Spanish?
If you really can’t get past the language barrier, then sit her down and tell her. Be generous with her severance if you can. Maybe offer to help find her a job with parents who speak Spanish.
I know it seems daunting but this does happen. You and she will both come out ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a new nanny start a few months ago and she greatly oversold her ability to speak English. I have absolutely nothing against her speaking Spanish (in fact, I have encouraged her to teach my son some, at her discretion). But the fact of the matter is, despite my explaining instructions multiple times, writing it down, texting it to her (so she could use google translate if she would like), everything is a mess and getting worse by the day instead of better. We have had issues with school pick-up for my son, missing activities, not following instructions within the home, etc. (not feeding him when I've asked, not giving him a bath, etc.). We have to constantly double check what she is doing and it is often not what we told her to do. I have spent so much time going through things with her each day and she says she understands me, but then things are still not done correctly. I feel absolutely terrible, as she is nice enough, but I'm at my limit and we need to let her go before something goes seriously wrong with my child. I can't trust her and I am terrified I'm going to be in a situation where she has to give him medicine or something and she can't follow my instructions.
Has anyone been in this scenario before? What did you do?
This is on you. You can tell immediately how fluent someone is in English as all you need is a simple conversation. Unless, of course, you are not fluent in English!
Anonymous wrote:We had a new nanny start a few months ago and she greatly oversold her ability to speak English. I have absolutely nothing against her speaking Spanish (in fact, I have encouraged her to teach my son some, at her discretion). But the fact of the matter is, despite my explaining instructions multiple times, writing it down, texting it to her (so she could use google translate if she would like), everything is a mess and getting worse by the day instead of better. We have had issues with school pick-up for my son, missing activities, not following instructions within the home, etc. (not feeding him when I've asked, not giving him a bath, etc.). We have to constantly double check what she is doing and it is often not what we told her to do. I have spent so much time going through things with her each day and she says she understands me, but then things are still not done correctly. I feel absolutely terrible, as she is nice enough, but I'm at my limit and we need to let her go before something goes seriously wrong with my child. I can't trust her and I am terrified I'm going to be in a situation where she has to give him medicine or something and she can't follow my instructions.
Has anyone been in this scenario before? What did you do?