English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

My son has never been in daycare or anythink like this. I've always been a stay at home mom, and he's an only child. My friends bring their kids over and he'll play with them, but if he doens't know other kids that he's around, he shys back, and won't get near them. I was thinking about putting him in preschool a couple or few days a week, do you think it will help, or the teacher won't understand and it will make him more insecure? Do they have preschool where you only go half a day? Any advice?

2006-10-31 17:03:02 · 6 answers · asked by Wonderious 3 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

6 answers

It is very common for children under 4 to not have much to do with children their age. The best thing to do right now is keep exposing him to other children by having friends come over or joining a mommy and me group. I suggest starting him in preschool when he turns 3 (no more than 3 days a week for no more than 3 hours per day). Many Montessori schools offer a half-day option. Make a list of some in your area and go and observe them without your son to get a good feel for it. Do a little research on Montessori to make certain that the program is a true Montessori program. Some schools call themselves Montessori when they are more play based. Make sure that the teachers have training in the philosophy, the school has Montessori materials, and that the teachers have been in the program for a long time (good schools keep their teachers). Once he starts school, he will start to feel more confident around other children. I promise you'll love Montessori! Hope this helps!

2006-11-01 07:04:06 · answer #1 · answered by marnonyahoo 6 · 0 0

I actually used to work for a preschool/daycare. There were classrooms for infants all the way up to 5 year olds. You could take your kid whenever you wanted and you didn't have to have them stay the whole day it depended on what you wanted to do. I believe it really does help your child because even though at first they might be shy or cry when you leave them, they get used to the interaction and can actually learn to play and interact with the other children as time goes by and they get used to it! The daycare I worked at there was also an actual curiculumn even for the 2 year old classroom. We would read stories, try to teach them things like the alphabet and sing songs. There were also different learning games like puzzles and what not that they were able to play with. I think it would be beneficial so that your child could also learn to kind of have a structured schedule for the day.

2006-10-31 17:16:10 · answer #2 · answered by Monica G 2 · 0 0

he's a toddler! some young children less than age 4 locate preschool particularly stressful and tearful. He does not 'want' preschool. the in basic terms young children that income from preschool are young children who've delays or from deprived homes. and young children who visit preK teach more effective perfect readiness for Kindergarten, yet even then the benefits by technique of 4th grade equivalent out to the youngsters who did not visit preschool. So do not experience rushed or pushed into putting your baby into preschool. seem for classes on your community. My guy is going to tale Time on the library, (Barnes and Noble has a software too), toddler gymnasium on the parks, next January he commence karate on the parks. we've a MOPS crew we visit. there are quite some different classes at zoos and museums too for lil ones. We actually have a playground on the mall that we visit each and every now and then. those type of can help you with 'social skills' human beings rant about as being so important. And, they prepare a baby to affix a set and follow a pacesetter in a secure, preserve putting.

2016-12-05 10:10:25 · answer #3 · answered by deparvine 4 · 0 0

I used to work in an early childhood program/daycare. They accepted children 6 weeks old to 4 years old. We had a curriculum from 18mos old on up. Most of the children were there 8-10 hours each day. I definately would not reccommend doing that unless you absolutely had to. It's important to look into any program you enroll your child into. Many churches and communities have early childhood programs, but many of these aren't excellent programs. The workers (some are called 'teachers') are not highly qualified -- no degree higher than HS -- so they only have the experience of working with their own children. The turnover rate of these employees is very high because the pay is fairly low compared to other jobs. I would look very closely at many early childhood programs before enrolling my child - even for a few hours each week.

2006-10-31 17:46:02 · answer #4 · answered by bernie216 2 · 0 0

I think it would be better to join a playgroup or find a mommy and me type class to go to before starting preschool. It helps with socialization and gets your child used to dealing with other adults before making the big step to being away from you. Moany cities run a mommy and me ype class through their rec dapt that's very inexpensive.

This is what I did with my daughter and now she has started preschool - 2 days a week for 2 hours a day. I'm going to increase the amount of days/ hours as she become more comfortable. It seems to be working well. Good luck.

2006-10-31 17:13:36 · answer #5 · answered by Elaine 5 · 0 0

Take him to a park and let him interact with other kids that way.

2006-10-31 17:18:34 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers