It is challenging at my home, to have children picked up during naptime. Sometimes the parent forgets and rings the doorbell, and this does interrupt sleep. Sometimes it's hard for them to know precisely when they will arrive, and this makes it more likely that the child who is leaving will inadvertently wake the children who are sleeping or resting.
We have infants through preschoolers sleeping in various areas, spaced so that they can each get whatever level of quiet time or naptime is optimum for each child. Sometimes that is near the door, depending on our child care space. And we care if they get their optimum level of quiet rest or sleep time. It affects their afternoon and evening, and it affects how they treat others and how others view them. That in turn affects how they think of themselves. It does matter to us. We tend to be very connected to 'our' children and take a fairly parental-type interest in fine-tuning their days.
And it does cut into our so-called downtime. You know, the downtime where I am filling out daily reports, printing pictures for our bulletin board, formulating a new privacy policy so that I can continue to post the pictures, checking for and answering emails from parents, checking the internet in case any regulations have been changed and no one has bothered to tell us yet, but we will still be held responsible, planning & setting up our afternoon activities, filling out menus and meal counts, doing daily, weekly or monthly bookkeeping, planning meals for the rest of the week, writing out grocery lists and looking for the best buys & coupons so that I can hold my expenses down for my families, washing dishes and cleaning the baby's toys from the morning, sweeping the crumbs from the floor, searching the internet for the perfect song to accompany our next unit and drooling over the wonderful toys that I want to get to go with it, but those $$ will cut into my personal income even further and I will honestly probably do it anyway because I know how much my children will love it and learn from it. That downtime? Yes, it does cut into that too.
Would I ever refuse to let a parent pick up a child? Of course not. Do I ask parents to arrange their days (except for an unusual circumstance) so that they do not pick up during naptime? Of course I do.
We have infants through preschoolers sleeping in various areas, spaced so that they can each get whatever level of quiet time or naptime is optimum for each child. Sometimes that is near the door, depending on our child care space. And we care if they get their optimum level of quiet rest or sleep time. It affects their afternoon and evening, and it affects how they treat others and how others view them. That in turn affects how they think of themselves. It does matter to us. We tend to be very connected to 'our' children and take a fairly parental-type interest in fine-tuning their days.
And it does cut into our so-called downtime. You know, the downtime where I am filling out daily reports, printing pictures for our bulletin board, formulating a new privacy policy so that I can continue to post the pictures, checking for and answering emails from parents, checking the internet in case any regulations have been changed and no one has bothered to tell us yet, but we will still be held responsible, planning & setting up our afternoon activities, filling out menus and meal counts, doing daily, weekly or monthly bookkeeping, planning meals for the rest of the week, writing out grocery lists and looking for the best buys & coupons so that I can hold my expenses down for my families, washing dishes and cleaning the baby's toys from the morning, sweeping the crumbs from the floor, searching the internet for the perfect song to accompany our next unit and drooling over the wonderful toys that I want to get to go with it, but those $$ will cut into my personal income even further and I will honestly probably do it anyway because I know how much my children will love it and learn from it. That downtime? Yes, it does cut into that too.
Would I ever refuse to let a parent pick up a child? Of course not. Do I ask parents to arrange their days (except for an unusual circumstance) so that they do not pick up during naptime? Of course I do.
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