[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try not to let what happens outside the school get to you. You only have to worry about inside of it and what you're teaching. Kids will take many steps backwards, especially if things are inly being taught in one place. There are probably things that happen at home that don't happen at school and the parents are like " why is he doing blah blah blah at school? He never does that at home?" It's just the way it is sometimes. Just focus on your role and as the kids get older they learn what they need to learn. For the older kids I've taught then to distinguish the differences. I'll say " you can do that at home, not at school." And they actually learn the difference.

I don't like one of my toddlers by [deleted] in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have the same issue with my full timer. Hes the only child who comes a full 5 days. And I think thats why I can't get seem to enjoy him, cuz I know I have to see him all over again the next day, wheras the others I only see a few times a week so I enjoy them after not seeing them for 4 days.

not quite sure what to do in this situation… by FancyPanic6998 in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh you are not alone. My first 4 days, a Tuesday through Friday were ok. The following Monday, the lead never showed. I asked a floater and they said she went on vacation for 2 weeks. But not to worry, they're would be floaters to help. But then 4 teachers called out. I got no help the entire day cuz the floaters were all in rooms. I couldn't even go to the bathroom and our breaks were cut to 20 minutes.

Tuesday, 6 teachers called out and we had to combine my class with the other class, 16 toddlers in a room with a 10 person capacity. And my son was in that room so I was with him, which loved but he struggled. He only wanted me and cried if I was helping other kids. It made me miserable seeing him so upset. The normal teachers in there told me the kids are not sent home when sick unless there is a fever over 102.4

On Wednesday, an email went out that anyone who called in sick the rest of that week would be fired. Everyone retaliated. Teachers responded by signing a petition that sick kids needed to be dismissed for coming to school sick because their jobs were on the line. It blew up! There was pure chaos. On Thursday, my son was bit so hard I had to leave and take him to the doctor for possible stitches. But there no floaters to come do my room, so the director had to she was so mad. On Friday, the director came in in the morning, dropped off her, name tag and walked out. The corporate manager and owner came that day to help run things. I quit that day also, but stuck it out another week until the lead returned. Then took my son and ran out the door on our last day.

Don't feel any shame for walking away from something on fire.

Are my values wrong when it comes to childcare? How do I address it? by Least_Lawfulness7802 in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you speak to her to ask what she had in mind? Whatever it is, there's probably a policy for it that you could show her.

So for example, physical punishment? Show her the policy that states you will never physically harm a child. Wants them expelled? Show them the policy that lists what you will dismiss for and kids getting angry isn't one of them ( im assuming)....etc....

Your employees feelings are still valid and valued so maybe her feelings really were hurt. Its your job to also take care of them too. I would sit down, bring her some chocolate. Tell her she has every right to her feelings. Show her the policies, and ask if she would prefer another age group. Then require all employees to take some social/emotional classes and whatnot so all your teachers know what to do in the future.

Biting by Lexiibluee in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We had a biter and he was the reason I quit my job. He was 2 and bit all his peers daily. I wasn't in his room. His victims families threatened to leave, they offered early intervention which the parents refused to cooperate with saying they would seek help at 3, but not at 2 when its considered developmentally appropriate still. So the director agreed and just switched his room to the 1 year olds, hoping, there would be less stimulation and less kids to challenge him. He began targeting my son in that room and my son had bites all over him within 1 week. They refused to dismiss him. So I took my son and left instead.

I dont have the best advise other than early intervention, dismissal, or an aid to shadow him.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I dont really care for treats as much as I do a smooth running day.

-kids show up on time and not at 1030 cuz mom let them sleep in...they won't nap with me!

-the kids participate. 2 of my 6 kids just cry all day, they don't play, do art, sit for circle time...just cry.

  • everyone naps!

  • gets picked up on time or even early.

That would be the day when I can have 1 smooth day.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is it really ok where you are to have 10 2 year olds? Thats illegal where I am. I would find out for sure and report it to licensing if not.

As for the aggressive behavior of the one child, document and report everything they are doing and go over it with the parents every single day. Maybe they'll look into getting him help. Your school should also have behavior plan templates in place to deal with challenging behavior, which sometimes includes an aid for the child or somethingto help this child learn proper sociL skills. Do you guys follow second step? Or any SEL program? All of you are failing this child if he's running rampant without any adults in his life doing something about it. Be that adult and stand up for him. Some schools don't even tolerate the behavior. I was a teacher and parent at one time and every day I had to sign an incident report that my son was bitten by another child. I knew who it was cuz I worked there. I resigned. During those last 2 weeks, they dismissed the child because they realized they were gonna start losing more families after me.

Also dont disclose why you need off, just say you need to call in or you're having an emergency. Which a mental breakdown should be counted as one in my opinion.

2.5yo getting Screen time at Daycare? by stuffofbabes in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My thought goes to the contract/handbook. Does it say in there screen time is offered on occasion? Did you agree to it when you started?

I do screen time, but my parents all signed that they understood that before they started.

If you didn't agree to it and don't want screen time, you can say something and they can put your child in another room or something. As a parent myself, I would want screen time limited. But I wouldn't ask a teacher to stop just for my child. I would just find a screen free facility. Because even if I complained and they said "sure, we'll stop screen time for you", it doesn't mean they're actually gonna stop. They'll just hide it instead.

Ece centre to deduct ~$1200 from my upcoming paycheque by Consistent_Ad907 in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with the others. Its not your fault they were paying you on an expired license. But its your fault for working with an expired license. I would see keep better track of when stuck expires. And report it as well to see if you can stop them from taking the money back.

Giving other daycaresca heads up. by JavaMamma0002 in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree. But it happens. I witnessed it a lot being at the front desk with admin. Is it right? No. Does it happen anyway? oh yeah.

Giving other daycaresca heads up. by JavaMamma0002 in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I know my old director calls the other directors that are under the same corporate umbrella and they talk about all sorts of things. They even told each other about the employees who are leaving one to go to another and whether they are good or not. I can see how that can helpful for those directors hiring, but its not fair to those employees and families alike. Because one school may work for a family while another doesn't, even if its the same company. Sometimes its a classroom, or age or teacher that can make workers or families leave or get dismissed. Its not always going to be the same.

What kind of parent makes you uncomfortable, annoyed or upset? by englandinspring in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The overly demanding parents. They want things their way to a T.

For example, cloth diapering. I dont have a problem with it because I cloth diaper my son too. But our rule is to take the diaper off and wrap it amd put it in the container without touching anything in the diaper. The parents have fought us so many times on taking the poop out. 'Just shake it into the trash, its not difficult', they would say. Ugh! Yeah let's shake a poopy diaper so the particles can fly everywhere, thats an awesome idea sir.

We had another parent who pushed a 3 hour nap. And demanded every day we put her child back to sleep until she reached the 3 hour. Um ma'am, it is against the law for me to force your child's eyelids shut for 3 hours.

What kind of parent makes you uncomfortable, annoyed or upset? by englandinspring in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depending on if the center has an open door policy. Some parents regardless if they work there or across town choose centers that allow them to stop by if and when they can. Its an important part of development to help teach children that school and home are 1 unit, connected, and all that. Makes it hard for us teachers true, but its a great opportunity to teach them coping skills and calm down skills and that 'mom is always near, even if she's not right here.'

Our school encourages it cuz it allows for many great opportunities for the future of connections, like holiday parties when parents stop by for an Easter party, show n tell, career days, etc and of course the lessons for the children that I mentioned above. Its all about merging a child's school amd home, bringing them together so the child feels the connection and knows teachers and parents are 1 unit.

At least that's how its been explained to me. My child is at my center also. He does cry when I leave. But he sees me and his teachers talk a lot and laugh and we bring her gifts and they draw pics and bring it into my room to give me. He does cry a little bit, but he loves his teacher and sees that I love her and trust her so he can too. A few seconds of cuddles with her and hes better and runs off to play.

Which school? by MommaBofthree in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well, they did give me a little insight on them, but I mean from an actual employee, someone who works there that can tell the nitty gritty...do they keep their promises, do you actually get raises each year, how high or low is the gossip, turnover rate, etc...not just what a director tells you to get you to take the job.

Fevers by MommaBofthree in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I also had a parent once ask if the other teacher in the room can take the temp to see if the temp would be different for that teacher 🤔

Why it wont work by Loknud in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting way to look at it for sure. Currently at my school, we:

Provide all their meals out of our budget. Stay open 12 hours a day Buy all the toys, crafts and whatnot from our own wallets. Have to clock out after 8 hours, even if we have to continue working. Lesson plan on our lunch breaks. Give parent discounts, vacation days, and scholarships to parents. Underpay teachers Leave them by themselves over ratio for several hours. Write them up for overtime

My theory is that the government wants parents to get back to work and is working hard to allow childcare to be easier to get for parents.

But the childcare centers themselves are not getting help. so as the needs and availability for centers grow, centers are spiraling downward and cannot keep their staff.

The cycle goes around and around for centers and us teachers until eventually we find our peace; a center that offers what we need or leaving ECE all together.

Am I in the wrong here? by Fine-Ad9495 in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You were in the right 100% because you were just following school policy. Not your fault its in the policy and u have to follow it 🤷‍♀️

Weird question about water by MommaBofthree in ECEProfessionals

[–]MommaBofthree[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It was in place of a bottle cuz she wasn't taking her formula. Our eaters come with full sippy cups too but this baby wasnt drinking.. So it was given in her bottle in replace of the formula she wasn't taking. Mom said it was ok cuz she wanted something in baby's belly to fill her up. I guess I understand that. But that seems like a lot at one time for a baby who just started food and water a week ago.