Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with PP. I’m Canadian and when I moved to the US I thought it was so weird parents didn’t do the bedtime routine, if they were home. It took me awhile to adjust to this because (in my mind) this was not normal. Maybe the AP doesn’t understand that in the US parents need a lot more help with these kinds of things. I mean, I had to move to the US to be a professional nanny because that really donest exist in Canada. Yes we have a caregiver program and people have nannies but it’s not like here.
Just want to clarify this is NOT a US parent thing. It is the norm for US parents to do the bedtime routine for their kids. It is outside the norm for US parents to hire someone else to regularly put their kids to bed. Please don't think this is every US family. It is not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with PP. I’m Canadian and when I moved to the US I thought it was so weird parents didn’t do the bedtime routine, if they were home. It took me awhile to adjust to this because (in my mind) this was not normal. Maybe the AP doesn’t understand that in the US parents need a lot more help with these kinds of things. I mean, I had to move to the US to be a professional nanny because that really donest exist in Canada. Yes we have a caregiver program and people have nannies but it’s not like here.
Just want to clarify this is NOT a US parent thing. It is the norm for US parents to do the bedtime routine for their kids. It is outside the norm for US parents to hire someone else to regularly put their kids to bed. Please don't think this is every US family. It is not.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with PP. I’m Canadian and when I moved to the US I thought it was so weird parents didn’t do the bedtime routine, if they were home. It took me awhile to adjust to this because (in my mind) this was not normal. Maybe the AP doesn’t understand that in the US parents need a lot more help with these kinds of things. I mean, I had to move to the US to be a professional nanny because that really donest exist in Canada. Yes we have a caregiver program and people have nannies but it’s not like here.
Anonymous wrote:Op again, appreciate all
Of this advice it is very helpful.
For the PP who asked about the hours- our kids are in early ES so she works 25-35 hours per week. So it is definitely within reason to ask to stay until 8.
Anonymous wrote:She’s not doing her job. You have her scheduled to work until 8. It’s her job to be working until you dismiss her, regardless of what each person is doing. Start reminding her that she is “on” until 8, and review the evening timeline, including the specific tasks you want her to do.
And former French ap, you know what you know from your experience, but in our half-French family we fully expect our au pair to be involved in bedtime if that is what we schedule her for. Our au pairs routinely work until 8-8:30 with our family, usually supervising dinner, bathing and getting ready for bed with our 3 kids while I either clean up dinner or start making dinner for myself and my husband. Then I will usually go up to finish up bedtime, read to the kids, etc., at which point I dismiss au pair and thank her for the day. We’ve hosted 5 French au pairs and none of them has indicated that this is challenging for them.
Anonymous wrote:If she is working til 8pm, what time does she start? Noon?