Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
"A professional knows how to do her job."
Most parents here don't need or want a professional nanny, not can they afford one.
Me again.
I'll always remember the CEO mother who interviewed a dozen 'top' nannies.
Then one day she offered to tell me why she wanted me:
I was "the only one" who told her what I would do with her child
when he was born.
Every other so-called nanny said she'd do
"whatever" the mother wanted.
Parents need to learn who is, and who isn't, a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Nannies are not teachers, really. They can help with some skills, but unless you hire a certified teacher to teach your child all day, that's not what their job is, fundamentally. They are not trained in teaching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nannies are not teachers, really. They can help with some skills, but unless you hire a certified teacher to teach your child all day, that's not what their job is, fundamentally. They are not trained in teaching.
Exactly which skills do you think a professional nanny can't teach a child?
Anonymous wrote:Nannies are not teachers, really. They can help with some skills, but unless you hire a certified teacher to teach your child all day, that's not what their job is, fundamentally. They are not trained in teaching.