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Euphoric !
Are grandparents the new daycare?
I have had my home daycare for 6 years and have been fortunate to have long term clients who also give me great referrals. Daycare life had been good until about 9 months ago I noticed a "grandparent babysitting" trend.
I have lost 2 children in this time, one family had been with me for 6 years, because grandparents are moving into parents home or just taking over the care duties of the children.
I am registered with two agencies in my area and the referrals from them have dried up. I haven't had an enquiry in a year.
I have heard from some providers that they are seeing older children come to them because the grandparents quickly tire of childcare or don't want to be tied down. They of course then only have that child for a short time until they go to f/t time J/K
For the first time (and I know I have been fortunate) I will be scrambling to fill spots this September. I am worried about this trend. Has anyone else noticed this?
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Yep, seems to be the trend here too. Almost everyone I talk to have the grandparents taking over the childcare needs. While that's great for the parents financially, let's be honest most grandparents don't provide any sort of program for the children (sure some of them will) but I know my grandparents would never have done it. Plus, now these little ones have basically no socialization with other children and no experience with other authoritative figures so school may be difficult. I know when I reach grandparent age I will love them and help my children out when I can but I certainly won't be taking over the role of raising their children lol
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The Following User Says Thank You to michellesmunchkins For This Useful Post:
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Euphoric !
mimi >> No enquiries for an entire year!?!?!?! Thats crazy. I would make a point of advertising as much as possible and if you arent getting any business from the agency you are with then I hope you arent taking some kind of pay cut to be on their books.IMO, I'd be inclined to ditch the agency and go it alone as really I'd expect them to give you a nice steady stream of enquiries coming in. Check out other forums on advertising and try and get your name out there. I couldn't imagine not having any enquiries, it would have me very anxious and unsettled about my job security. Try setting up a free website on webs.com and also advertise on kijiji, godaycare and this website too. Even make up some posters and put them up in schools, churches, and community centres. Even if you dont have the space its good to take peoples information incase the worst happens and children leave you. Good Luck with everything.
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The Following User Says Thank You to bright sparks For This Useful Post:
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Mimi, I agree with brightsparks. Something is fishy there with the agency. Brightsparks gave lots of great ideas to advertise, but don't forget hospitals and large corporations with interal buy/sell electronic systems because you reach a lot of people that way. Check with friends and family and get the word out. I always say a website is the best selling feature you can find, but you have to get your name out there.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Momof4 For This Useful Post:
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I am finding that lots of parents are splitting childcare between grandparents and a daycare. I do not get a lot of inquiries for FT due to this.
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The Following User Says Thank You to monkeymama For This Useful Post:
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I get a lot of part time requests too - someone to take the kids a couple days a week so the grandparents can have lunch with friends or play bridge at the social centre. They do it because economic times are tight. Many grandparents even are paid a small amount of money as a way of the children repaying the grandparents and giving them some extra money. Other times and more often it is the grandparents providing free care to help out.
Once the child reaches 18 months and grandparents can't run after them as well nor does the child want to sit on grandma's knee and read stories and rock all day the parents start to look for something more. Their expectations though are more than what they should be in the sense of they are jumping right to the preschool expectations of programming and forgetting the learning lessons of toddlerhood.
I am really glad I am nearing the end of my daycare years and not just starting out because lately there have been so many strikes against us that it is hard to make a good go of it.
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The Following User Says Thank You to playfelt For This Useful Post:
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Euphoric !
Hmmm - well technically grandparents were the ORIGINAL daycare once upon a time cause families lived close together and if mama was working the farm or what not and needing 'care' it was family that took over that role cause that was the only option
I think with all the earlier retirements and 'buy outs' that baby boomers are getting that yes it will be a trend to see more of them helping out with childcare of their grand children to help 'save $$' cause depending on circumstances they can do it for free or for a 'discounted rate' if they need some top up income and do not want to be a greeter at Walmart!
I agree that I would not rely solely on an agency to fill me up .... I am not sure which province you are in but I know in my area of Ontario the 'waiting list' for subsidy is so long that agency referrals are VERY limited because most people going that route want / need subsidy and are not going to pay full market fees for agency when they can get the same private care for $10-20 a day less ... I was with an agency for two years when I opened and ended up leaving because not one referral because anytime I had a space I was able to fill it privately well before they even got me a 'list of people' to contact looking for care ... the middleman and the time it takes for them to do their thing is just not 'efficient' and I was not going to forgo revenue while they got their act together!
Does your agency allow you to have private clients as long as you follow their 'rules' for ratios and age groupings and so forth?
Children construct their own intelligence. The adult must provide activities and context, but most of all must be able to listen. Children need proof that adults believe in them. Their three great desires are to be listened to, to understand, and to demonstrate that they are exactly what we expect."
Loris Malaguzzi
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The Following User Says Thank You to Inspired by Reggio For This Useful Post:
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I have one that comes to me 4 days a week and goes to Grandma on day 5. If Grandma had her way she'd be there full time, but mom wants the child to socialize. Grandmas are great for spoiling the kids one day a week, but I don't know about full time.
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The Following User Says Thank You to apples and bananas For This Useful Post:
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apples and bananas- i have one the exact same. comes 4 days and grandma takes her one day. i think its great to have that time with grandma!
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I have one who is 3 day w/ me 2 days w/ grandma...
Grandma let her eat whatever she wants for lunch, last week was a bag of chips, becuase she didn't like anything else. Yeah.Right.....ummm who's in charge?
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Double Your Kids Back!! 
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The Following User Says Thank You to Mamma_Mia For This Useful Post:
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