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Dropping Kids Off At Nursery For A Full Day - Is This Right?
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Whilst I think it's none of the business of the woman who left the note in the link for parents dumping their kids off at nursery, is she correct?
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When our first child arrived we took the old fashioned decision that we wanted a parent to raise her rather than a stranger, and therefore my wife gave up work (and she had a damned good job). It was a real struggle going down to one salary and we sacrificed a lot, for years, but ultimately we felt it was worth the sacrifice.
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When our first child arrived we took the old fashioned decision that we wanted a parent to raise her rather than a stranger, and therefore my wife gave up work (and she had a damned good job). It was a real struggle going down to one salary and we sacrificed a lot, for years, but ultimately we felt it was worth the sacrifice.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.She has a point, it does develop better bonding if a child remains with it's mother and father for the first 2 or 3 years of it's life.
However with the cost of housing as high as it is I can see that it is an economic necessity for a mother to return to work as soon as possible. Especially in an are as expensive as Muswell Hill. I am certain the nursery provides the very highest standard of care but it can't substitute for a mother's love and care in the very early years.
However with the cost of housing as high as it is I can see that it is an economic necessity for a mother to return to work as soon as possible. Especially in an are as expensive as Muswell Hill. I am certain the nursery provides the very highest standard of care but it can't substitute for a mother's love and care in the very early years.
It's none of her business- different things suit different people and many have to work anyway. My granddaughter is due to start nursery in January and she will only just be 2, but my daughter is a single parent and has to work and so do I. I do think she is young to go- and I will worry about her, but I think you do whatever age they start.
This might be out of date now, but when I did the Child Development part of Psychology- it was the first 2 years that babies need only the mother, not 4 years. But you do what you have to and if it's a good nursery and good parents, I'm sure the children will be fine.
This might be out of date now, but when I did the Child Development part of Psychology- it was the first 2 years that babies need only the mother, not 4 years. But you do what you have to and if it's a good nursery and good parents, I'm sure the children will be fine.
Nowhere in the link does it say how old the 'Baby' is. It could be 2 or 3.
I don't suppose it is under a year old. I have not heard of many nurseries that take children under 3, a childminder is more likely for that age where a baby would get constant care by a 'substitute Mum'.
But if you read the actual letter it does say that the child is dropped off at 8 ish and not picked up until 7 ish, so 11 hours at a stretch away from Mum. That does to me sound too long, the child will need to go to sleep almost as soon as it is picked up , allowing for a full night's sleep the child can be seeing nothing of it Mum at all during the working week.
I don't suppose it is under a year old. I have not heard of many nurseries that take children under 3, a childminder is more likely for that age where a baby would get constant care by a 'substitute Mum'.
But if you read the actual letter it does say that the child is dropped off at 8 ish and not picked up until 7 ish, so 11 hours at a stretch away from Mum. That does to me sound too long, the child will need to go to sleep almost as soon as it is picked up , allowing for a full night's sleep the child can be seeing nothing of it Mum at all during the working week.
dropping a child off at 8 then picking them up at 7 doesn't make them bad parents.
dropping a child off at 8, then 1hr commute to work, work til 5/6pm then commute back and collect child.
Was once met with a comment from a mum at school bus-stop, 'now that your youngest is in school, you'll be looking for a job then?'
took great delight in telling her I had 3 part-time jobs and had been doing so since the youngest was 2 years old.
She knew nothing so I told her to keep her neb out.
dropping a child off at 8, then 1hr commute to work, work til 5/6pm then commute back and collect child.
Was once met with a comment from a mum at school bus-stop, 'now that your youngest is in school, you'll be looking for a job then?'
took great delight in telling her I had 3 part-time jobs and had been doing so since the youngest was 2 years old.
She knew nothing so I told her to keep her neb out.
Islay, all our 5 children were raised exclusively by my wife and I. Never sent them to school until they were old enough to go to first school. Then my wife took them and collected them every day. She was a also child minder for a couple who were both teachers at a school in a different town. They dropped their 2 children off at our house at 8 am and my wife took them into school with our own children then picked them up and looked after them until their Mum and Dad came and collected them at 4.30pm.
I worked full time and in 2 jobs so it was mainly my wife that did the day to day child care, she did not work, apart from the child minding. Which was officially registered with the school and the local council.
I worked full time and in 2 jobs so it was mainly my wife that did the day to day child care, she did not work, apart from the child minding. Which was officially registered with the school and the local council.
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