Anonymous wrote:"I am a parent and would only a hire a young nanny if I was seeking someone to care for an older child...perhaps an Elementary aged child. A big playmate type nanny would be an awesome job for you OP.
For an infant or toddler aged child, I would prefer and older and more experienced nanny since caring for these ages of children is much tougher. "
agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not hire someone who is 20 years old. I also would not hire someone with broken English. Our nanny speaks French and English, but both are flawless. If a prospective nanny told me she was 20 years old and had 10 years of experience I would mentally dismiss eight of those, and then not hire her because I would worry about what other truths would be spun.
Oh give me a break. Everyone makes things look better on a resume, it's about selling yourself so you get noticed. It doesn't make OP a liar!
She has already been advised not to use her high school years as work experience, move on.
No, that's lying. Saying you have more experience in a field than you do is flat out LYING on a resume. Which is grounds for firing in any corporation, btw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your childhood (before age 18) experience is NOT caregiving experience. You should only reference it in terms of how much you enjoy kids and how caring for your younger brother and neighbor as a teen led you into nannying as a young adult; if you try to make it sound like actual working experience, many parents will see that as a red flag.
Agree with PP, get a NSoE to proofread your profile and job applications because your age and inexperience combined with an unpolished presentation will make it very difficult to get hired by people who will treat you fairly.
Also maybe take a look at your attitude. You are coming across here as a little bit defensive, which is not a desirable trait in a household employee. Maybe I'm misreading that, but think about it nonetheless.
Sorry, I do need help with my english, and I am taking classes to get over my caribbean english.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not hire someone who is 20 years old. I also would not hire someone with broken English. Our nanny speaks French and English, but both are flawless. If a prospective nanny told me she was 20 years old and had 10 years of experience I would mentally dismiss eight of those, and then not hire her because I would worry about what other truths would be spun.
Oh give me a break. Everyone makes things look better on a resume, it's about selling yourself so you get noticed. It doesn't make OP a liar!
She has already been advised not to use her high school years as work experience, move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you come in contact with the people you lived with in exchange for room & board? I'm looking for a set-up like that.
I find these on CL quite often. Try in the Childcare section as well as Domestic Gigs and searching for stuff like work exchange under the Rooms/Shared (in Housing) section.
How many hours a month do you expect to "give" them? And what did you do for an income?
Anonymous wrote:I would not hire someone who is 20 years old. I also would not hire someone with broken English. Our nanny speaks French and English, but both are flawless. If a prospective nanny told me she was 20 years old and had 10 years of experience I would mentally dismiss eight of those, and then not hire her because I would worry about what other truths would be spun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you come in contact with the people you lived with in exchange for room & board? I'm looking for a set-up like that.
I find these on CL quite often. Try in the Childcare section as well as Domestic Gigs and searching for stuff like work exchange under the Rooms/Shared (in Housing) section.
Anonymous wrote:How did you come in contact with the people you lived with in exchange for room & board? I'm looking for a set-up like that.