Anonymous wrote:We had an au pair stay with us today, and we were quite surprised at how friendly they were and how little they costed verse our day-to-day nanny.
What are your opinions of Au pairs
Anonymous wrote:Love my APs.
As a single mom i love having another adult in the house, especially in case of emergencies. My house is tiny and we live on top of each other and share the 1 bathroom. but none of my 3 au pairs seemed to care. I gave them no responsibility other than loving my daughter and keeping her safe. I was for sure the most popular HM in our area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a nanny 2 for 2 years and APs for 5 now. We started with the nanny after daycare when children we 2 and 4. We went through 3 nannies in 2 years. We live in Arlington, 4 blocks from metro and 1 block from bus; but all 3 nannies drove their car to our home.
We ended up firing all 3 nannies for one reason or the other, but mainly they could never make it to work if it rained or snowed basically. Which sucked for me as DH works internationally and was often away.
We went to APs and never looked back - we pay more than the $200 and have 3 cars and have gotten great female and male APs.
Now that our children are older we only have very athletic APs who play sports with them or have a hobby in common with both.
For a split schedule, and actually playing WITH the children AP is they way to go. Our APs never miss work, and are perfect for school aged children.
Having someone live with you does get old, but if your house is big enough not really an issue too often.
20.59 here. With a live-in nanny, you get all of that (including no commute!), and the maturity of an adult. Because we’re not regulated like APs, we can work whenever and do whichever tasks we negotiate. However, that is much more expensive than an AP. To each their own
Anonymous wrote:We had a nanny 2 for 2 years and APs for 5 now. We started with the nanny after daycare when children we 2 and 4. We went through 3 nannies in 2 years. We live in Arlington, 4 blocks from metro and 1 block from bus; but all 3 nannies drove their car to our home.
We ended up firing all 3 nannies for one reason or the other, but mainly they could never make it to work if it rained or snowed basically. Which sucked for me as DH works internationally and was often away.
We went to APs and never looked back - we pay more than the $200 and have 3 cars and have gotten great female and male APs.
Now that our children are older we only have very athletic APs who play sports with them or have a hobby in common with both.
For a split schedule, and actually playing WITH the children AP is they way to go. Our APs never miss work, and are perfect for school aged children.
Having someone live with you does get old, but if your house is big enough not really an issue too often.
Anonymous wrote:We had a nanny 2 for 2 years and APs for 5 now. We started with the nanny after daycare when children we 2 and 4. We went through 3 nannies in 2 years. We live in Arlington, 4 blocks from metro and 1 block from bus; but all 3 nannies drove their car to our home.
We ended up firing all 3 nannies for one reason or the other, but mainly they could never make it to work if it rained or snowed basically. Which sucked for me as DH works internationally and was often away.
We went to APs and never looked back - we pay more than the $200 and have 3 cars and have gotten great female and male APs.
Now that our children are older we only have very athletic APs who play sports with them or have a hobby in common with both.
For a split schedule, and actually playing WITH the children AP is they way to go. Our APs never miss work, and are perfect for school aged children.
Having someone live with you does get old, but if your house is big enough not really an issue too often.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An ap is a young adult that needs guidance and is also new to this country and she lives with you. There's is a 45 hr limit to her working and the cost is not just the weekly stipend but the agency fees, food etc. A nanny is an employee who is completely self sufficient, with experience and unless love in goes home at night and has her own life and can also work more than 45 hrs a week depending on your contract.
They are completely different childcare options. I wouldn't use an ah pair for a toddler or preschooler but for elementary kids and the split shift of morning and a little after school would make sense.
This. There are additional costs for an au pair, and strict limits on how many hours they can work. And you have responsibilities to her, even when she's not working. She's not a child-care professional, and she has to go home after one or two years. And some au pairs view it as more of a vacation, and there may be culture clashes or problems with integrating her into your household in terms of meals, chores, etc. A nanny is a professional, you can agree that she will work more hours in exchange for overtime, and you aren't responsible for her in her off hours. There are advantages and disadvantages to both options.
Anonymous wrote:We have had the same nanny for over seven years. I like that at the end of the day the nanny leaves. I like that my children have had containuety (sp?) of care. I like that a nanny is a nanny because this is the career they've chosen. An au pair is just doing it because they want to come to the country.