Anonymous wrote:I see nothing wrong with it. I put a little GPS tracker under our nannies car after she had been working with us for a couple weeks. She has not yet strayed from the expected path between home and school or other places we knew she was going.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see nothing wrong with it. I put a little GPS tracker under our nannies car after she had been working with us for a couple weeks. She has not yet strayed from the expected path between home and school or other places we knew she was going.
You are very mean...
Anonymous wrote:I see nothing wrong with it. I put a little GPS tracker under our nannies car after she had been working with us for a couple weeks. She has not yet strayed from the expected path between home and school or other places we knew she was going.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My guess is they want to use that Find Friends app which doesn't give them access to your phone in any way - it just shows them your location. DH and I use it so that if one of us is running late, etc. and can't come to the phone (happens a lot when we get stuck in meetings etc.) the other can see where you are. You can turn it on and off as well so you can just have it on during work hours.
If you haven't started yet and you are their first nanny, I can see a family wanting to just be able to see if you are home or at the park or wherever. The reality is trust is earned - not handed over to some stranger on the first day with your child. A background check and references only tell you so much - and with the number of threads on here with nannies saying things like "I take my charge to my house all the time and my MB doesn't know but she probably won't care" or "will the time I was arrested for hitting my daughter show up in a background check?" it's not crazy for new parents to be nervous before the relationship is formed.
All that said, you have to decide what you are comfortable with and they have to decide where their lines of comfort are as well, and if they don't overlap, it may just not be a good fit. If you are not comfortable, you can say no, and see what they say. I wouldn't ask my nanny to use an app like that, but then again, until we really got to know each other, she didn't take DC anywhere but the park down the street or to other activities I knew about and/or planned. She now goes lots of places with DC now but she tells me in the mornings what they have planned and then texts me if those plans change, so I do always know where they are. I wouldn't be comfortable with a nanny who viewed my need to know where they are as an invasion of her privacy rather than a legitimate concern about my child's whereabouts.
I do understand where they are coming from, which is why I use an app that allows them to see everything we're doing - from diapers and bottles to walks and attending a local story time.
They also have nanny cams, so if they check in and we're not in view they can always check the app or text/call me.
I have always kept a log for the families I've worked for, and if we were ever going somewhere we'd never been before (or maybe somewhere we rarely went) I made sure to clear it with them and let them know ahead of time.
My intention isn't to keep them out of the loop, but considering all of the above, I feel like tracking my phone is crossing a line and I'm not comfortable with it.
Anonymous wrote:My guess is they want to use that Find Friends app which doesn't give them access to your phone in any way - it just shows them your location. DH and I use it so that if one of us is running late, etc. and can't come to the phone (happens a lot when we get stuck in meetings etc.) the other can see where you are. You can turn it on and off as well so you can just have it on during work hours.
If you haven't started yet and you are their first nanny, I can see a family wanting to just be able to see if you are home or at the park or wherever. The reality is trust is earned - not handed over to some stranger on the first day with your child. A background check and references only tell you so much - and with the number of threads on here with nannies saying things like "I take my charge to my house all the time and my MB doesn't know but she probably won't care" or "will the time I was arrested for hitting my daughter show up in a background check?" it's not crazy for new parents to be nervous before the relationship is formed.
All that said, you have to decide what you are comfortable with and they have to decide where their lines of comfort are as well, and if they don't overlap, it may just not be a good fit. If you are not comfortable, you can say no, and see what they say. I wouldn't ask my nanny to use an app like that, but then again, until we really got to know each other, she didn't take DC anywhere but the park down the street or to other activities I knew about and/or planned. She now goes lots of places with DC now but she tells me in the mornings what they have planned and then texts me if those plans change, so I do always know where they are. I wouldn't be comfortable with a nanny who viewed my need to know where they are as an invasion of her privacy rather than a legitimate concern about my child's whereabouts.
Anonymous wrote:My guess is they want to use that Find Friends app which doesn't give them access to your phone in any way - it just shows them your location. DH and I use it so that if one of us is running late, etc. and can't come to the phone (happens a lot when we get stuck in meetings etc.) the other can see where you are. You can turn it on and off as well so you can just have it on during work hours.
If you haven't started yet and you are their first nanny, I can see a family wanting to just be able to see if you are home or at the park or wherever. The reality is trust is earned - not handed over to some stranger on the first day with your child. A background check and references only tell you so much - and with the number of threads on here with nannies saying things like "I take my charge to my house all the time and my MB doesn't know but she probably won't care" or "will the time I was arrested for hitting my daughter show up in a background check?" it's not crazy for new parents to be nervous before the relationship is formed.
All that said, you have to decide what you are comfortable with and they have to decide where their lines of comfort are as well, and if they don't overlap, it may just not be a good fit. If you are not comfortable, you can say no, and see what they say. I wouldn't ask my nanny to use an app like that, but then again, until we really got to know each other, she didn't take DC anywhere but the park down the street or to other activities I knew about and/or planned. She now goes lots of places with DC now but she tells me in the mornings what they have planned and then texts me if those plans change, so I do always know where they are. I wouldn't be comfortable with a nanny who viewed my need to know where they are as an invasion of her privacy rather than a legitimate concern about my child's whereabouts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your prospective new employers want to track your movements when you are working and with your children? Is that the situation?
What about when you are not working - will they still be able to track your location?
My soon-to-be employers (job has been offered, contract signed) want me to install an spp like "Find my iPhone" or "find my friends" so that they can track my phone via the GPS that the app uses. I'm assuming they want to know where I am at all times when I am working and caring for their child. I'm sure they would say they wouldn't track me during my off hours, but what would stop then?