We met the head teacher in the infant room of the daycare I want to go with. It is a new branch of a very well established and hightly recommended center, which will open at the end of the month (we do not need care until March). The teacher just graduated from college with a BA in child development this spring. So while she has many years experience working with kids, it is not professionally. But I trust the school. Would her inexperience as a teacher worry you?
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Re: more about daycares--would this worry you?
M/C found 2/27/13-- D & C 3/6/13
no, it wouldn't.
ETA: I should explain why it wouldn't bother me.... at the infant stage, there's not much "teaching" going on. As long as she can provide the basics... I mean, babies pretty much eat, poop, and sleep... I'd be satisfied at this stage. For the infant room, education means less to me than compassion and cleanliness.
Not unless there are only 4 kids in the room (must have 1 teacher per every 4 infants) so no, it isn't likely.
Ditto this.
No, they did not. I asked her how long she had been working with kids and she said 9 years. But she just graduated, so I assumed she has not had a job yet which was my mistake, a big one I now realize.
If you get a good vibe from her, I would just go with it and keep checking in with how you think things are going there once LO is in the daycare.
My BFF moved down to CA with her DH two years ago with her Bachelors in Fine Arts. She had experience nannying and got an assistant teacher position in a Child Development Center. W/in 6 months she was the head teacher of that room, and just recently she became the director of the school. And she had no previous professional experience when hired. So go with your gut! It could be great!
Edit: Also, she is actually a fabulous teacher, who while teaching, has taken the latest college courses to get up to date on the field.