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Wedding Woes

"We're happy with his daycare and development. Thanks" ::lather, rinse, repeat::

mrsconn23mrsconn23 member
Knottie Warrior 10000 Comments 500 Love Its First Answer
edited October 2014 in Wedding Woes

Dear Prudie,
My 2-year-old son is enrolled in a day care program run by a woman who works from her home, along with two assistant teachers. The head teacher is very warm, and I’m confident that my son’s emotional needs are being met. However, the program is very informal: The kids basically spend all day playing independently (though there are the usual stories and songs, etc.) and aren’t actively taught new skills. My mother is extremely concerned that this lack of a formal child-development-oriented program is holding my son back. The way she describes it, it seems like all the other 2-year-olds she meets are debating current events and solving algebra problems, while my son sits around all day with a chew toy and a ribbon of drool hanging from his chin. My parents have offered to help cover the costs of the “fancier” day care in the area that I can’t afford, but they can’t afford it either! Should I be investing more in my son’s development? And if I’m doing the right thing, how do I get my mother to back off?

—Tired of This Mommy War

Re: "We're happy with his daycare and development. Thanks" ::lather, rinse, repeat::

  • Kids learn all their skills at daycare?

    I didn't go to day care, do I lose at life?
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  • If the parents think the program is good, the grandparents should butt out.

    Some kids actually learn better left to their own devices. When I was a toddler, due to circumstances, I was mostly left on my own. Because of that, I taught myself a lot of things and was actually more advanced than most kids my age. I could even read before I could walk. Some kids just learn things differently.
  • A 2-y-o needs to play. Not learn new languages, not get taught at - PLAY. There are studies about this, about how pushing little kids to learn backfires, and learning through free play is the best strategy for the most kids. 

    Grandma needs a HSD card, and fast. 
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  • I'm so farking glad I wasn't a kid during this era.  The absolute pressure to succeed keeps getting younger and younger and more and more specialized.

    Give 'em a damn chew toy.  Play helps learn things too.  Not everyone will start reading at an early age, it doesn't mean they're idiots.
  • I'm more concerned that this mom is writing to ask Prudie to validate her choices as a mother.  If she's happy and her son is thriving, then she doesn't need an Official Prudie Stamp of Approval, KWIM?  Tell her mom to stuff it, LW and son live happily ever after. 
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