Why Do You Think DCFs Choose Your DC?

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  • daycarediva
    Daycare.com Member
    • Jul 2012
    • 11698

    #16
    -education/experience
    -policies-firm on illness/behavior
    -developmentally appropriate/play based
    -farm to table as much as possible, organic
    -I don't take infants
    -my space/equipment, I have been told it's nicer than any center 'classroom' in our area (I have only seen a handful)
    -reliability/stability -most of my business is word of mouth

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    • Controlled Chaos
      Daycare.com Member
      • Jun 2014
      • 2108

      #17
      - I have a teaching license, not an early ed degree but parents like to see that I was a "real" teacher (their words not mine) before daycare.
      - I have a curriculum for prek that I document well
      - price: cheaper than a prek at a center but more expensive than any other fcc around here
      - marketing: I am really good at showing what we do here. I have a solid website, active FB presence and text parents pics of kids. So they see what they are paying for.
      - Referrals: I am friendly and outgoing. Parents feel comfortable with me.
      Food - mostly organic, nothing processed, lots of fresh produce, some from our garden.

      Comment

      • Pestle
        Daycare.com Member
        • May 2016
        • 1729

        #18
        -Reasonable hours for parents who work a typical 8-5 job
        -Safe and spacious areas for learning and play. I put my degree and six years of practice in design to work when I set this house up!
        -A small, well-curated collection of toys. Not the massive pile of broken, grimy plastic toys at most family day cares.
        -A back yard set up for creative play and exploration.
        -A policy handbook that address concerns first-time parents didn't know they would have (sick policy, discipline, emergency plans, etc.)
        -An emphasis on teaching independence and personal care for toddlers; they are here to learn through doing, not just be lectured or corralled.

        Comment

        • Pestle
          Daycare.com Member
          • May 2016
          • 1729

          #19
          Oh, and it's not a Christian day care. I have a degree in theology and we do Montessori religious instruction for our own child, but we don't have any religious content in the day care. I have an atheist family and a Jewish family, and here in the middle of the Bible belt, they must find it hard to find a family day care provider who won't proselytize to their kids. Most of the Craigslist postings I see advertise Christian care. I believe that religion is too important and too nuanced for anybody but the family to take the lead in passing it along.

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