Hi fellow Working Moms, I posted awhile back about when to start looking for daycare, well we have started the looking and now I have a question about things to ask the daycare. I loved the one we saw today, La Petite Academy... it is on my work's campus which is a huge bonus. Can anyone help me with follow up questions for infant care? I asked a ton during the tour/meeting but feel like I am forgetting something. Here's the info they told me...
*Infant room has a max of 6 kids. 3:1 child/teacher ratio. Currently there are 5 babies in there with 2 teachers. At 9 months or mobile/walking, baby moves to the "upper infant" room
*When I asked if I could come at lunch and breastfeed, she was like WE ENCOURAGE THAT, we have an open door policy, you are welcome to come any time to visit during the day & she said I can just sit in a rocker right there in the classroom or use their private break room. **Obvs this will just be up til 6month when I am EBF and not when LO is a toddler and will freak out if I leave**
*Each baby has their own crib. They provide all linens (and wash them every night)
*Once LO is old enough, they provide breakfast, lunch and snack each day
*They provide burp cloths and bibs and launder them each night
*$350/week...I asked about if they do any time throughout the year at 50% price or something...I know some places do that if you have a planned vacation or it's during the holidays and you know your baby won't be coming in (waiting to hear back from an email for that one)
*Starting in the infant room they have a curriculum that they follow. Different music, songs, motor skill activities etc. It changes each week so baby is constantly learning something new.
What else should I ask?? I feel like I'm missing something. Thanks in advance!
Re: Follow up Questions to Daycare??
Policy for your Lo being picked up by someone other than you etc .
You might have observed this during your tour but how do they keep your LO's bottles separate from someone else? Same goes for extra clothes, diaper bag etc. Do you have to provide diapers/wipes or do they provide them at an extra cost? What is the fee to reserve your spot? Is there a sibling discount (assuming that you might in the future enroll a second child there)? Are babies held when they are given bottles or do they encourage the babies to hold their own bottles at a young age? How much time does baby typically spend in swing/bouncer etc.? What is the average tenure of the employees in the infant room (high turnover would be a red flag to me). Do they require you to label bottles and what information do they need on the bottle? If baby refuses the bottle, how long do they wait before trying again? What is their sick policy?
Did you also observe the babies there? Did they seem happy, were the employees interacting with them?
$350 to me seems high - did you look at other places? Is that typical where you live?
I will be asking if a follow up email.
@ss265 $350 is average where I live. That's with a 10% employee discount.
The infant teachers have a tenure of 17 years and 24 years. Absolutely loved that about the place! The center director said she's been there 11 years and "she still feels new."
I really appreciated the question suggestions about feedings. Having never had a NB before, I didn't think to ask any of that.
Note- I saw a sample of the menu and saw the kitchen. It looked good to me. You do have the option to send your own food, though. It's a peanut free facility which is nice.
@theresat858 I would be fine nursing every day at lunch for a year, but I don't think that would be enough to avoid a bottle, though. I'm still learning about breastfeeding, so bear with me but a feeding before work (7:30) and after work (5:30) doesn't seem like it would be enough combined with one midday feeding to keep my supply up. I'll have to wait and see how LO is and what kind of feeding schedule we're on at 12 weeks.
On mobile sorry can't quote-- what is the correct answer to this question?
This is a little bit of a trick question. It is very bad to prop bottles in a baby's mouth - i.e. lay the baby down somewhere and then use a stuffed toy or something to "jam" the bottle in their mouth. I doubt that any DC provider will admit that they do this but you might just get someone admitting to this if you throw the question out.
Obviously you would have to hold a very young baby when you give them a bottle. At around 6 months, some babies might start trying to hold their own bottle and some DC will actually encourage this so that they can lay the baby down somewhere and have them hold their own bottle. I personally didn't encourage DS1 to hold his bottle because I wanted him to have that human contact when being fed. He did eventually start holding his bottle at maybe around 9 months. Holding their own bottle is a developmental milestone and obviously I didn't want DS to be delayed developmentally but I don't think our pedi even asked us about this until 9 or 12 months.
Nightly sheet washing doesn't bother me. If baby spits up or sweats in the crib and they want to wash the sheets, that's fine by me. They said you can bring your own linens, and parents who do that usually take them home on weekends. Maybe it's a law?? Maryland is weird...stranger things have happened.. Haha
Thanks for the additional questions. @K3am They do an hour of outside time each day- broken up into morning and afternoon. Didn't seem like enough but there are a bunch of classes so I understand it's a scheduling thing.
Regarding frozen breast milk, they said they don't ever open bottles. They warm them from the outside and don't ever physically open the top. So I don't know where that leaves the froEn breast milk question. I do know each infant room had it's own refrigerator and they give you labels to put on all your bottles. Each kid has a cubby and they put the empty ones in there as the day goes by (I'm guessing- I saw a bottle in a cubby)
My state has a regulation that babies up to 1 year must be held for feedings, even if they hold their own bottles. I think this is a great policy. Feeding is very important for bonding. Both my children are VERY independent, but neither one ever held their own bottle.
The best daycares in my area emphasize floor time and do not even have swings. Bouncers are limited to 30 minutes per day per child. Most of the babies' awake time is spent on the floor with teachers playing and interacting with LOs.
This may seem like a simple question but ask how they communicate with parents. My kids are at Goddard and they never communicate it is like they expect parents to have ESP. They leave notes on the classeoom door but don’t tell you important notes are left on the door, btw door has other stuff on it so not like it jumps out at you. Friday they tell us “Mother’s day tea at 3:30 on the 9th”. Okay what does that mean each class have one? Do I need to bring a grandparent so each of my kids has someone? So I asked the question but it is like that with everything. There is a child in my DD’s room with a peanut allergies I had no clue other than I saw a sign meanwhile DD tells me he got all red and sick because someone brought in peanut butter. In my opinion we should have gotten written notice and told not to bring in peanut products. We don't have email addresses for the teachers either so if the main teacher is not there at the end of the day there is no way to know how your child did that day. Their daily sheet is photocopied for all the kids and then a special moment written about each child. so a lot of frustration over something that is very simple to solve.
Does your state certify day cares? In TX I can look up inspection reports by all day care centers that are licensed and before we picked our current day care, I looked up all their inspection reports and the violations they had. If your state does something similar, I would check that out.
And I assume you also get a sheet at the end of the day with notes etc. on how LO did right?