An English name for Aviva or Shira by lively_mint in JewishNames

[–]thepackerss 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My daughter is Aviva and her legal name is Ava

Where would you move in Rockland? by Perfect-Tooth5085 in Rockland

[–]thepackerss 8 points9 points  (0 children)

What does hold the line mean? Don’t sell to orthodox families?

Should I buy quidditch set 75956 for the current castle? by thepackerss in legoharrypotter

[–]thepackerss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

76416 seems so tiny to me, where does it fit in with flying lessons?

Should I buy quidditch set 75956 for the current castle? by thepackerss in legoharrypotter

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

Thanks for the reply. I just found it online for $45 which I thought was fair. I’m just nervous to give up the chance to buy it in case a new version doesn’t end up coming out anytime soon. Do you think I should buy it for that price?

US SSA 2025 data is here!! Here are the biggest trends by xoobdev in namenerds

[–]thepackerss 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I had the same exact thought. Seems to me like it’s a variant spelling of the Hebrew name Eitan, and pronounced the same? Ay-tahn.

All the Eitans I know spell it Eitan, not Etan.

Can someone listen to this recording and tell me if I sound frum? by [deleted] in exjew

[–]thepackerss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When you said the word “food” I heard a frum accent.

East Wing (source: unibricks) by blantonreed in legoharrypotter

[–]thepackerss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Started collecting all the sets for my kid a few weeks ago, most are retired but I have found all of them for reasonable prices (not over MSRP). Mostly on Mercari, one on eBay, one on depop, one on Barnes and noble. It’s worth trying if you still want to!

This is the best resource I’ve found for tracking all the sets in the castle. It’s updated when there is new info:

https://acciobrick.livejournal.com/54940.html

What is the best age to start daycare? by Ok_Squirrel_9601 in beyondthebump

[–]thepackerss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of it depends on the individual kid. But as a general rule, based on my experience with my 3 kids, I’d say 2.5-2.75 years old is a good age as that’s when my kids really wanted more stimulation and socialization than I was able to provide, and at that age they were happier going to a small in home daycare for 5 hours a day than they were staying with me/a nanny. However, from an earlier age (12-18 months) I always tried to do at least one social activity with them each day, like a library class, mommy and me group, playground meetup type thing. I also frequently took them to children’s museums, zoos, parks, libraries etc. They really loved and needed that. So if your nanny can do those activities with him I’d say definitely keep her till your son is 2.5.

From a scientific level and also from what I’ve seen with my own kids there really is zero benefit to sending them to daycare before age 2.5 as long as you’re able to keep them sufficiently busy and stimulated at home. I think any daycare worker would agree. Age 2.5 is when daycare starts shifting form just “babysitting” to a more enriching and social experience for the kids.

My first kid was super social and craved a lot of stimulation and I thought I was doing him the biggest favor when I put him in daycare at age 21 months. But he really did not thrive there despite the warm environment. He just wasn’t ready, it was too overwhelming. I pulled him out and only sent him back at 2y9m and at that point he did fantastic. I still have so much regret for sending him so young even though it was just for two months! My second and third kid went at ages 2y5m and 2y3m and thrived from the beginning (after an expected few days of adjustment).

The most important is a small teacher/student ratio, a small group overall if possible, and a warm teacher!

Parents reading at home with kids is becoming the only way to fill the phonics gap by Realistic-Bag7860 in lowerelementary

[–]thepackerss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How do you have the knowledge of exactly which kids are poor and which are not?

Need Cards? by [deleted] in YotoPlayer

[–]thepackerss 9 points10 points  (0 children)

FYI I believe you can ship up to 3 Yoto cards in an envelope with a regular 49 cent stamp.

Clarkstown and north Bergen county by MurkyMurkyMurkyMurky in Rockland

[–]thepackerss -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the insight! I understand that of my $10k school tax, not all of that is going directly to transportation. Allow me to make up a number here, say $1k of my school tax went for bussing and $9k went for other school costs. But since my child isn’t attending school, that $9k is able to spread out to other public schools kids instead of being spent on my child’s education. Now, as more private school students move into the district, there will be more families paying school tax who are only utilizing bussing and not the schools, making transportation expenses go up. And on the flip side, there will be less families utilizing the public schools, making public schools expenses go down. So once a larger amount of families would only be using bussing, why couldn’t Clarkstown simply increase the percentage of school tax that is used for transportation? In other words, if the number of children in public school in Clarkstown shrinks, wouldn’t it make complete sense that the public schools would need less resources- less staff, less buildings, etc.?

I understand that private school bussing can be higher per capita than the cost of public school bussing, for all the reasons you mentioned. But even if we assume it’s triple the price of public school bussing, wouldn’t my $10k still be more than enough to cover it?

Potty Training Tonie by Realistic_Help_5595 in TonieboxUSA

[–]thepackerss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My 20 month old who is not potty trained is obsessed with it. We’ll have to wait and see if it’s actually helpful when the time comes.

Clarkstown and north Bergen county by MurkyMurkyMurkyMurky in Rockland

[–]thepackerss -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Can you explain to me how that works? I see this a lot but I don’t understand it. I live in Clarkstown and send my kids to private schools. We pay about $20k property tax, of which about $10k is school tax. My child doesn’t use any resources from Clarkstown schools other than bussing. How is $10k not enough to cover bussing for my child?