Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Professionals have a license to practice their trade: teacher doctor, enegineer, lawyer, nurses, message therapist, estheticians. beautician. Nannies. However, have no certificate to ply their trade. No institution of higher learning confers a degree in Nannying. Anyone can be a nannyand zero training is required.
So there is a college degree to become a "professional golfer" or "professional model"?
You have been posting this same nonsense over and over again since I have been reading this forum and you have always been shot down. Why continue? You just embarrass yourself.
As was posted before people say professional golfer, etc. because golfing and modeling (beauty pageants), etc. are hobbies that the person has segwayed into a job. No one nannies as a hobby, nanny is always a "job" so we already know you are getting paid to be a nanny (unlike when someone says they are going to play golf, your first thought is that it is unpaid and for fun) so you aren't a professional, you are just a worker. Just like any other job no one, that isn't trying to argue semantics, would prefix with "professional" such as Target cashier or McDonalds cook.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Professionals have a license to practice their trade: teacher doctor, enegineer, lawyer, nurses, message therapist, estheticians. beautician. Nannies. However, have no certificate to ply their trade. No institution of higher learning confers a degree in Nannying. Anyone can be a nannyand zero training is required.
So there is a college degree to become a "professional golfer" or "professional model"?
You have been posting this same nonsense over and over again since I have been reading this forum and you have always been shot down. Why continue? You just embarrass yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Professionals have a license to practice their trade: teacher doctor, enegineer, lawyer, nurses, message therapist, estheticians. beautician. Nannies. However, have no certificate to ply their trade. No institution of higher learning confers a degree in Nannying. Anyone can be a nannyand zero training is required.
Anonymous wrote:Professionals have a license to practice their trade: teacher doctor, enegineer, lawyer, nurses, message therapist, estheticians. beautician. Nannies. However, have no certificate to ply their trade. No institution of higher learning confers a degree in Nannying. Anyone can be a nannyand zero training is required.
Anonymous wrote:MB here. I had a bright young woman interview with me for a nanny job. During the interview, she kept asking "What are you looking for?"
It is really hard to say what exactly makes a professional nanny. If I say "this," then a nanny might be TOO "this" which is not what I meant. Also, being "this" does not mean that it does not mean it does not include something else but also is important, if omitted completely. So, it is hard to say in concrete terms.
Sure, love and attention and care is the most important. But you could be the most loving and attentive nanny in the world but if the MB comes up to a big dump at the end of the day (and she didn't leave it that way in the morning) and she has to spend an hour cleaning up instead of spending time with her kids every night she wants to do, you are not meeting the needs.
You could be the cleanest nanny in the world and and the most loving nanny but by the time the kid enters preschool and the kid does not know the ABCs you have failed as a nanny.
You could be the safest driver but doesn't know how to let MB know how safe you are, and she worries about you driving all day while working, it means you lack communication skills as a nanny and a decent communication skill is required as a professional nanny.
Then there are those skills for knowing how to soothe an infant, getting them to take a bottle. No class is going to teach you that. A professional nanny going into an infant caretaker position is expected to know these things.
What makes a good mother? What makes a good teacher? What makes a good manager? What makes a good nanny? There is no one good answer.
The bright young woman who interviewed with me did not get the job. It was just a gut feeling but she came off as being a bit immature, seeking 1 right answer to this question "what does the MB want?"
Anonymous wrote:MB here. I had a bright young woman interview with me for a nanny job. During the interview, she kept asking "What are you looking for?"
It is really hard to say what exactly makes a professional nanny. If I say "this," then a nanny might be TOO "this" which is not what I meant. Also, being "this" does not mean that it does not mean it does not include something else but also is important, if omitted completely. So, it is hard to say in concrete terms.
Sure, love and attention and care is the most important. But you could be the most loving and attentive nanny in the world but if the MB comes up to a big dump at the end of the day (and she didn't leave it that way in the morning) and she has to spend an hour cleaning up instead of spending time with her kids every night she wants to do, you are not meeting the needs.
You could be the cleanest nanny in the world and and the most loving nanny but by the time the kid enters preschool and the kid does not know the ABCs you have failed as a nanny.
You could be the safest driver but doesn't know how to let MB know how safe you are, and she worries about you driving all day while working, it means you lack communication skills as a nanny and a decent communication skill is required as a professional nanny.
Then there are those skills for knowing how to soothe an infant, getting them to take a bottle. No class is going to teach you that. A professional nanny going into an infant caretaker position is expected to know these things.
What makes a good mother? What makes a good teacher? What makes a good manager? What makes a good nanny? There is no one good answer.
The bright young woman who interviewed with me did not get the job. It was just a gut feeling but she came off as being a bit immature, seeking 1 right answer to this question "what does the MB want?"
Anonymous wrote:Another MB here and I want a college degree. Our nanny has a masters degree in one of the liberal arts and loves being a nanny. She is imaginative, loves to read and is not addicted to her phone. No nonsense or drama. Her vocabulary and grammar alone are a plus to my kids' education.
BTW "professional" actually doesn't mean anything more than being paid for a job or service (eg professional boxer or professional actor) and it is more than a hobby.
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.
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.