Hey ladies. DS has been in daycare since he was 3 months old. I love the daycare he's at because its at my office so I can pop down and see him whenever I want which is great. Plus the ladies are just the sweetest. No onto my question....
When he was almost 10 months old they moved him to the big kid side of the infant room where all of the crawlers go. He was barely army crawling then but seeing all of the other kids crawling and pulling himself up helped him tremendously and within weeks he was doing it all on his own too.
Well I just came back from visiting and asked his teacher when the next transition would be. This is a big transition out of the infant room and into the toddler room. The only catch is they have to walk in order to go to the toddler room, which DS is not close to doing. They told me he's not on the transition list at all which I understand because quite frankly I wouldn't want him going in a room where he's gonna get trampled by the big kids walking and running around.
My beef is that they'll transition some of the infants into the side that he's on now and most of them aren't even close to crawling. Most just started to sit on their own. They all will be 4+ months younger than him. I feel like his teachers will be forced to work extra hard to get him to walk because he will no longer have friends walking in his room. He'll see everyone on the floor and he'll want to be on the floor too. I can't help but feel bad because I don't want him to be left behind. I asked if when he does start walking if they'll move him immediately so that he can be with kids his age and they said they hope they'll have a spot for him, no guarantees of course.
Am I nuts for feeling bad that my son is possibly going to be left behind? I'm hopeful that he'll wake up one day and start walking on his own really soon, but I also know that he has been late on all of his other milestones so why not this one too!
Re: Daycare mom's would you feel bad??
Jessica - Thanks for the trial run suggestion, I'll definitely bring that up if we get to that point of course.
Not yet but even his teacher recommended I talk to her since I am concerned so I will.
You definitely don't want to transition him until he's comfortable walking. It's a huge step up and the bigger kids in the toddler room will trample him.
I would really talk to the director and his teacher about your concerns.
I don't see how the teachers will "work extra hard to get him to walk". There's really nothing anyone can do to make a kid walk before they are ready. My DD watched kids crawl for months and was content to watch them and not try it herself. Same thing for walking. She waited until she was ready (crawled at 11mo and walked at 14.5mo,). (And FWIW, not walking until 15mo is still considered NORMAL, not late.)
So I don't think it will harm your son in any way to have him surrounded by younger babies. The only thing I'd be worried about is if they can't promise that they'll be able to transition him soon after he does start walking. Because once he does they'll have to watch him closely to make sure he doesn't step on a smaller baby and in most daycares the infant room is a lot smaller than the walker rooms and there won't be room for him to have fun.
Someone has to be the oldest and someone has to be the youngest, I don't think it'll be a problem for him to be oldest for a little while.
By extra hard I mean they'd need to practice walking with him instead of just letting him try to figure it out on his own. Only because when he sees all of the other kids hanging out on the floor he's just going to want to do that too. Why be walking if you can have fun on the floor really! I practice walking with him on my own at home and when we got to PT for his torticollis his therapist practices with him too so as long as I can get his teachers to say that they will practice with him daily then I wouldn't feel as bad. I'd just hate for him to delay walking even further because of not seeing any other kids in his class doing it.
DS is one of the older babies in his infant classroom, and he refused to walk for the longest time. I would try to get him to stand and he would hold his feet in the air, parallel to the floor. There are no other walking babies in his classroom. And then, one day, he just decided it was time to start walking, and things took off from there. He's actually transitioning to the toddler room this week. I don't think being around others who are walking all the time will necessarily help encourage him to walk -- kids really do it when they feel ready.
If you are really concerned, you might see if your son can "visit" the toddlers for certain periods during the day.