Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have two weeks left and so she’s stopped doing her job.
This. I feel you OP. We also gave notice and our nanny also has essentially stopped working. And shows up 15-30 min late even after I talked to her about her being late. It is absolutely maddening.
Anonymous wrote:Although she’s crappy your son sounds bad AF. Regardless if she was watching him or not he should have enough training to know not to draw all over the couch. Fire the nanny and watch him yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have two weeks left and so she’s stopped doing her job.
This. I feel you OP. We also gave notice and our nanny also has essentially stopped working. And shows up 15-30 min late even after I talked to her about her being late. It is absolutely maddening.[/quote
Nanny here and it shouldn’t be this way. It’s not the last week of school where everyone slacks off. This is a job. When my charges get ready to transition to school and I know my seeing them everyday is going to end, I work even harder getting my charges ready for the transition and cherish those last days.
I’m sorry you both had this experience. It’s childish and ultimately stupid for the nanny to tank her recommendation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although she’s crappy your son sounds bad AF. Regardless if she was watching him or not he should have enough training to know not to draw all over the couch. Fire the nanny and watch him yourself.
Nowhere does OP state how old this child is. If the child is 3+, yes, this is ridiculous behavior. If the child is 1-2, this is an adult failure.
He’s old enough to draw, watch tv and ride a scooter. Sounds like he is about 3+ years old and is bad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a Nanny & I personally think arriving 3-5 minutes late is typically not a big deal.
Anything after five minutes is concerning.
If a parent needs to walk out the door by a specific time, then it is better if they schedule the Nanny’s arrival by about fifteen minutes prior.
Your Nanny sounds like she is not on her A-game at all.
I would issue her her walking papers stat.
Anonymous wrote:I am a Nanny & I personally think arriving 3-5 minutes late is typically not a big deal.
Anything after five minutes is concerning.
If a parent needs to walk out the door by a specific time, then it is better if they schedule the Nanny’s arrival by about fifteen minutes prior.
Your Nanny sounds like she is not on her A-game at all.
I would issue her her walking papers stat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have two weeks left and so she’s stopped doing her job.
This. I feel you OP. We also gave notice and our nanny also has essentially stopped working. And shows up 15-30 min late even after I talked to her about her being late. It is absolutely maddening.[/quote
Nanny here and it shouldn’t be this way. It’s not the last week of school where everyone slacks off. This is a job. When my charges get ready to transition to school and I know my seeing them everyday is going to end, I work even harder getting my charges ready for the transition and cherish those last days.
I’m sorry you both had this experience. It’s childish and ultimately stupid for the nanny to tank her recommendation.
Anonymous wrote:You have two weeks left and so she’s stopped doing her job.
Anonymous wrote:1. She's not keeping him safe, and she tried to hide that he was hurt.
2. He destroyed a couch due to her inattention.
3. She's always late. When you tried to work with her, she took the request for a text as a new start time.
4. She's always on her phone and he's getting increasing amounts of screen time.
1 and 2 are safety issues. 3 speaks to reliability. 2 and 4 speak to her interaction with your child. 1 shows deception.
These are all red flags. I don't care if she is supposed to be there another 2 minutes, 2 days, 2 weeks or 2 years. No child should be left with someone like this. Immediate termination, please!
~Live-in nanny