Anonymous wrote:OP here -
let me clarify a bit; I was trying not to get into too much detail, but this might be helpful. Her tone is very harsh with them. I believe this to be cultural and also personality, meaning, when I see her get overwhelmed, she tends to scold them, as opposed to firmly telling them and moving on or re-directling their energy. She doesn't seem to know what to do or how to handle high energy, and tends to lash out and repeat and repeat in a very harsh and scolding way. This is not a fit for our family. But, as I am trying to be sensitive to her personality and cultural background or tendencies, I don't want to lay into her. She has done a fine job; just not the right fit for us, which is why I want to move on, yet be sensitive, but ultimately let her go b/c to us, sensitivity and respect towards the kids is a non-negotiator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gosh I would have been devastated to be fired and not been able to see the kids again! But I see what everyone is saying and I never was let go, so maybe I'd have felt differently if I had been.
And OP never said the nanny did "shitty work," just that they found a better fit.
oP said the nanny was bad with kids. What does that tell you?
Anyone want a doctor who is bad at surgery or diagnoses?
Anonymous wrote:Gosh I would have been devastated to be fired and not been able to see the kids again! But I see what everyone is saying and I never was let go, so maybe I'd have felt differently if I had been.
And OP never said the nanny did "shitty work," just that they found a better fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP thanks for this info.
Definitely going to offer something. Was thinking 1 week bc she was with us only 6 months, but I will consider the 2 weeks, like everyone is saying.
For six months of shitty work there is NO way I would give two weeks severance. That's for when you're laying someone off not firing for cause.
Where did OP say the nanny did 6 months of shitty work? Bad fit doesn't mean bad work. I have a few families that I babysit for occassionally and I know that I would be a terrible fit for them as a full time nanny. We have different styles and different priorities. Its fine for a few hours here and there but wouldn't work on a daily basis. Does that mean I'm a bad nanny? No. Does that mean I'm lazy? No. OP said her nanny was a bad fit. There is no reason to assume her nanny wasn't anything other than a good employee that simply didn't mesh. She certainly doesn't deserve financial hardship for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP I'm a different poster but I can give you an example.
I babysit for a nice family, two children 5 and 7. They have tried to poach me as their nanny for over three years and I have always declined. I like them, I like their kids, so it should be a good fit right? No. They are obsessively worried about everything, they have the strangest rules that I can't even predict (last time I babysat the older one was reading Little House on the Prairie as his bedtime book and I read him a few chapters - only when his parents got home did they tell me to skip over words like "gun" - why are you reading him a frontiers book if we can't talk about the guns they carried?) and can't seem to learn after years of knowing them. They aren't allowed to run, for example, unless they are on grass. Yeah try enforcing that every day with two active boys! Every behavioral thing, like when the 4yo was in a phase of threatening to cut people's body parts off with scissors ("I'm going to chop your hair!") meant an hour+ discussion about whether he was "normal" or not and how we should approach it. Language has to be Waldorf specific, so rather than "let's put the toys away" it had to be "the toys are going to rest now." That's a handful of approximately 800,000 quirks I had to navigate as a sitter. No way could I have been their nanny!!
NP here and here is my "just not the right fit" story. A very nice and educated couple were (probably still are) germaphobes. They wouldn't even let their baby crawl off his blanket (washed every day) that we put on the carpeted floor for him. He wasn't allowed to touch any leaves or flowers when he was in the stroller for fear of toxic chemicals. They also would not let me take him anywhere in the stroller where there might be other people (like the library or park to watch the kids) When I took him for a walk I had to keep him moving in the stroller and never stop for fear someone might touch him. However - they never did one thing to baby-proof a sharp edged glass coffee table or up security fencing up on their fourth floor balcony. I had to give my notice before I became too attached to their poor baby.
We did not fit.
Anonymous wrote:PP I'm a different poster but I can give you an example.
I babysit for a nice family, two children 5 and 7. They have tried to poach me as their nanny for over three years and I have always declined. I like them, I like their kids, so it should be a good fit right? No. They are obsessively worried about everything, they have the strangest rules that I can't even predict (last time I babysat the older one was reading Little House on the Prairie as his bedtime book and I read him a few chapters - only when his parents got home did they tell me to skip over words like "gun" - why are you reading him a frontiers book if we can't talk about the guns they carried?) and can't seem to learn after years of knowing them. They aren't allowed to run, for example, unless they are on grass. Yeah try enforcing that every day with two active boys! Every behavioral thing, like when the 4yo was in a phase of threatening to cut people's body parts off with scissors ("I'm going to chop your hair!") meant an hour+ discussion about whether he was "normal" or not and how we should approach it. Language has to be Waldorf specific, so rather than "let's put the toys away" it had to be "the toys are going to rest now." That's a handful of approximately 800,000 quirks I had to navigate as a sitter. No way could I have been their nanny!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP thanks for this info.
Definitely going to offer something. Was thinking 1 week bc she was with us only 6 months, but I will consider the 2 weeks, like everyone is saying.
For six months of shitty work there is NO way I would give two weeks severance. That's for when you're laying someone off not firing for cause.
Where did OP say the nanny did 6 months of shitty work? Bad fit doesn't mean bad work. I have a few families that I babysit for occassionally and I know that I would be a terrible fit for them as a full time nanny. We have different styles and different priorities. Its fine for a few hours here and there but wouldn't work on a daily basis. Does that mean I'm a bad nanny? No. Does that mean I'm lazy? No. OP said her nanny was a bad fit. There is no reason to assume her nanny wasn't anything other than a good employee that simply didn't mesh. She certainly doesn't deserve financial hardship for that.
Anonymous wrote:Gosh I would have been devastated to be fired and not been able to see the kids again! But I see what everyone is saying and I never was let go, so maybe I'd have felt differently if I had been.
And OP never said the nanny did "shitty work," just that they found a better fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP thanks for this info.
Definitely going to offer something. Was thinking 1 week bc she was with us only 6 months, but I will consider the 2 weeks, like everyone is saying.
For six months of shitty work there is NO way I would give two weeks severance. That's for when you're laying someone off not firing for cause.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP thanks for this info.
Definitely going to offer something. Was thinking 1 week bc she was with us only 6 months, but I will consider the 2 weeks, like everyone is saying.
For six months of shitty work there is NO way I would give two weeks severance. That's for when you're laying someone off not firing for cause.