Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Childcare Issues

I have a little bit of a rant.

As you probably know, I'm going back to school. This is good. What isn't good is the fact that I can usually take a maximum of 4-7 credits a semester. Full time is 12-18. This is bad because it's going to take me years to get an AS of Biology, normally a four-semester degree. The reason I can take only one or two classes a semester is simple: Nolan.

What I'd like to know is why a community college like CSI - with a significant percentage of non-traditional students - does not offer some sort of babysitting service. Oh, they have a childcare center and an Early Childhood Development program, but the "daycare"at the Childcare Center is open to the public, not only CSI students or staff/faculty, and it's usually full. Moreover, you must sign your child up for either a half day or a full day. There's no flexibility for students whose work and/or class schedule will change every semester. The Early Childhood Development Program, if you can even get your kid a spot, is even less flexible.

So I made up a "proposal" of sorts. A Community College should have such a progam to benefit students who have obligations outside of their education. I submit:
  1. Such a program should be available to only CSI students who are in good standing and attending class. It is a babysitting service, not a daycare, so staff/faculty should use the CSI Childcare center.
  2. The Program should be affordable; either subsidized by student tuition/fees, or a per hour/per child system should be set up. Or more ideally, both. For reference, Gold's Gym has a Kid's Klub where parents can leave their children during their workout. They purchase a punchcard for $20 that gets 25 hour-and-a-half punches (may be vice/versa). Or you can pay by the hour (I do not know what this rate is; I use a punchcard)
  3. Students should only be allowed to use this service during the hours they are actually attending class, as listed on their schedule. Any necessary deviations could be approved by the student's instructor(s) or Advisor. (eg. Activity by Contract is a self-study PE course with no set schedule, therefore, if the student is using the CSI Student Rec center to fulfill their class obligations, an exception should be made for them.)
  4. The program should be available during normal working/school hours. If enough demand warranted an extension, possibly hours could be extended to include night classes. (I am operating under the assumption that during evening hours, most people can probably find a babysitter elsewhere.)
  5. This is not a 'drop-off" service. Students should sign up at the beginning of the semester, (or perhaps a deadline *before* the semester begins should be implemented) and give notice if their child will not be there for their expected time slots. Students should leave their child no more than 15 minutes before their scheduled class time and pick them up no later than 15 minutes after.
  6. This can be a good work/study position under a child-care-certified head. (I am unfamiliar with child-care laws about how many adults per child need to be present, CPR certifications, etc - all that would need to be addressed.)

I would LOVE to have comments on this entry, if people can think of circumstances or policies that would need to be modified or added.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Geocaching


Here is Daddy and Nolan geocaching. Nolan found this geocache all by himself. He took Mardi Gras beads out of the cache, and he left a SPIDER!


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Here is Nolan searching for another geocache. This one had a trackable coin in it that we will take to another cache somewhere.


Here is Nolan and Daddy opening another geocache. Nolan got a toy car out of this one.

Saturday, January 06, 2007

More things Nolan can say

Nolan is now picking up more words on a daily basis. I'll try to keep posting when he learns another one.

Knee (he hurt his knee and told us about it)
BrrCold (that's one word)
Chip
Key

Monday, January 01, 2007

And the duck loses.

Nolan generally likes wildlife. All sorts of animals are quite fascinating to him.

My sister has a fuzzy duck. This fuzzy duck quacks out one note of "Old MacDonald" every time you flap his mouth. He's a puppet. Did I forget that part?

Jill tried entertaining Nolan with the fuzzy duck, which scared the peedoodles out of Nolan. He spent the whole of "Quacked Old MacDonald" snuggled into daddy's chest. So Jill took pity on him and took the duck with her to the couch to watch the BSU/UO Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.

The duck was innocently sitting on the couch, when Nolan peeked over the back and spied the evil duck. He quietly creeped around, retrieving his trusty Nerf suction-dart gun, slowly advancing on his enemy's position. At the last second, he jumped up, took aim and BLEW THE DUCK AWAY!

Thus spake Nolan. The Duck is no more.

What Nolan Can Say

I thought Jan 1 would be a good day to give a Nolan update.

He's *finally* talking. We were very concerned, because for the longest time, he would not even say "Mama" or "Dada"

The silly boy did what he's done for every major milestone: He waited until he could do it perfectly, then just did it. He went from saying absolutely nothing to talking in sentences.


So, here's what Nolan's saying as of Jan 1, 2007:

Mama
Dada
Maamaw (Grandma) (a in Ma prounounced like au in laugh)
Papa (Grandpa)
I want that
What's that
I want it
Aly
More
Uh-oh
No
Yes
Bye-bye
Juice