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 Christian Parenting Today, September/October 1998
FEATURE ARTICLE
adventures in baby sitting
How to find a great sitterand peace of mind, too
by Annette LaPlaca
in the mid-eighties, Hollywood came out with a movie called "Adventures
in Baby-sitting," in which a teen sitter takes her charges into inner-city
Chicago. While there, they have a tire blow out and their windshield shot
out. They get waylaid by a ring of car thieves, they sing the blues in an
R&B club and attend a boozy frat party, they scale the outside top
of a skyscraper and drive at breakneck speeds on crowded freewaysat night.
Of course, the unsuspecting parents never find out.
If you've never seen this movie, don't even think about renting the video!
If you're like most parents, you're feeling enough anxiety every time you
leave your kids with a sitterif you can even find one.
But don't panic and give up going out until your youngest starts college.
Take a deep breath, ask the Lord to give you wisdom (James 1:5), good judgment
(Ps. 119:66) and peaceful confidence (Isa. 32:17), then begin your search
for a baby sitter your kids will love and you will trust. Here are practical
ways to get started.
network
your neighborhood
Networking is key to developing your short list of trustworthy sitters. The
secret? Start talking. Your church is your number-one networking zone, a
community-within-a-community, and should be more likely to produce a sitter
who shares your values. Here are ideas for folks to talk to.
Other parents of young children: Who's sitting for you, and what do
you like about that sitter?
Parents of teens: Tell me about your daughter (or son). Do you feel
she's ready to baby-sit? (I've found parents will give a realistic appraisal
of their child's maturity.)
The youth pastor (and spouse): Who are the teens at the core of our
youth group? Which young people show leadership skills and compassion?
The public library's youth program coordinator: Who are some mature
young people who volunteer at the library? (These kids tend to be
community-minded and good students, though not always Christians.)
Dorm parents from a local Christian college: Which students regularly
baby-sit?
A sitter you've liked: Whom would you recommend? (When our favorite
baby-sitter was preparing to go to college, I asked her this, and we've used
two of her friends on occasion.)
Then talk with the potential sitters. You don't have to promise them a gig
on that first conversation. Talk with them at church or call them to ask:
-
How long have you been baby-sitting?
-
How do you feel about sitting for children the ages of [your kids]?
-
If your kids have special needs: Have you had experience working with
children with these needs? (Gauge the confidence of their answers.)
-
Whom else have you baby-sat for? (Get phone numbers. It's appropriate for
teens who want to work as sitters to provide references.)
grow
your own
Baby-sitters have a way of growing older, getting steady boyfriends, finding
other jobs or going off to college. So if you see a young person who would
make a great sitter but who lacks experience or skills, go ahead and cultivate
him or her as a future first-string baby sitter.
My next-door neighbor, Christina, age 12, is our baby-sitter-in-training.
At 12, she is probably not old enough for some types of baby-sittingespecially
newborn care or late nights. But, according to childbirth educator Debra
Evans, "Maturity isn't necessarily an age issue." She recommends judging
a sitter's maturity based on "responsibility, staying calm under stress,
and the ability to focus on meeting the needs of others." According to the
Department of Child and Family Services, there is no legal age requirement
for this very reason: some 12-year-olds are more responsible than 17-year-olds.
But, says dcfs, "12 seems to be the magic number"; they don't recommend choosing
a sitter younger than that.
Our neighbor is a mature, kind, Christian 12-year-oldand she's ideally
located (no transportation involved!). I have Christina help me with Julia
and Robbie while I'm home, but busy on the computer or getting the house
ready for company. This way, I can monitor how she's doing.
I've praised Christina's down-on-the-rug interaction with my kids and her
creativity in coming up with "let's pretend" games. I've also noticed that
she's too accommodating to my bossy 4-year-old. I've encouraged her to establish
her authority, and I remind my kids, in front of Christina, that she's the
boss and to obey her. With a bit of peripheral vision, I can keep an eye
on how she's shaping up as a sitter and help her develop.
A while back I tried this with another young person who'd been recommended
to me. I was disappointed with her stay-in-the-chair and keep-the-tv-on methods
of "watching" Julia and Rob; I didn't ask her back.
After a year of watching my kids while I'm home, Christina knows my kids,
and they love her. Recently we've had her baby-sit for short periods of time,
during daylight hours, when her mom is home next door.
Another plus is that Christina's mom is planning to sign her up for a
"SuperSitters" course offered by our local hospital. The American Red Cross
offers the program at hospitals and ymcas (call Red Cross for the course
closest to you). Monique Vodicka, who teaches the SuperSitters course at
Central DuPage Hospital in the Chicago area, tells me the eight-hour course
teaches young people, starting at age 11, "how to interact with parents;
what toys, games, and calming or distracting techniques work best with children
at various developmental stages from infancy to age 7; problem-solving; and
extensive first aid.
"Students leave the program with two resource booksone on first aid and
one offering ideas and guidelines for caring for kids at different developmental
stages," says Vodicka. "We encourage the students to take their books with
them when they baby-sitjust in case."
If you're grooming a junior higher to be your number-one sitter, you might
offer to pay for a course like this yourself (or let the teen work off the
cost of the course by sitting for you).
make the most
of what you've got
While you're networking and training, you'll be meeting and trying out several
young people as sitters. Some may not feel like a perfect fit the first time
they're in your home, but perhaps you see potential. Go ahead and work with
these teens; they're learning as they go (like a lot of us parents!). Here
are some tips for getting the best out of a sitter.
1. Leave explicit instructions. I'm talking about more than a posted
chart with your kids' doctor's name and insurance info, emergency numbers
and nearby neighbors' names and numberswhich you should have posted somewhere
near a phone. Perhaps your sitter doesn't have the maturity or experience
to judge for herself when a diaper needs changing, when a toddler needs cuddle
time, when a potty-training youngster needs a visit to the bathroom.
Be specific: "Have Julia try to go potty around 7:30. Ask them if they want
a snack about half an hour before pajamas and story time. Spend five minutes
rocking Robbie before you lay him in bed. Pray with Julia when you tuck her
in. At bedtime, leave Julia's door open a few inches, but close Robbie's."
These details help your sitter fit into your children's routines more
comfortably.
2. Ask for information. I tell sitters that I'm a nervous mom who
likes lots of information. I warn them that I'll probably ask about what
my kids ate and when, about who went potty, about phone calls, about who
cried and why. This way they take mental notes and will be prepared to talk
to me. I feel better having a sitter tell me, "We spilled red juice on the
playroom carpet," than finding the hidden stain two weeks later. If a sitter
won't talk with me, I'll look for another one.
3. Lay down the ground rules. "No tv except for specified programs
or videos until after the kids are in bed. No phone calls or visits from
friends." These guidelines are recommended by the Youth for Christ staff
in their handbook Parents & Children. Balance these no-nos with
the privileges: "Feel free to watch something from our video collection"
or "Help yourself to the Breyer's Rocky Road in the freezer."
Most sitters aim to please, but some don't have the maturity to live by your
rules. My friends Kevin and Karen instructed a sitter not to watch violent
cop shows while their kids were awake to see them. When their kids reported
that the sitter watched such programs, they asked the sitter to stop. When
he did it a second time, they stopped calling him.
4. Express your appreciation. If your kids tell you they had a great
time or they love the sitter, pass that info along. Again, be specific if
you can. When your sitter reports on the evening with the kind of detail
you like, thank her for it. If she's left the kitchen and playroom in good
shape, praise her efforts. If you can afford it, put a tip on top of the
regular pay rate and say, "That's for your patience when Robbie was crying
for an hour" or "That's for being so responsible when
"
keep up hope
My kids' all-time favorite baby-sitter is Kim, who started sitting for them
when she was 15 and when I was brave enough to leave my baby with a sitter.
She was gentle, responsible, creative andbest of allloving. If you think
that sounds too good to be true, get this: she's also fanatically neat and
would clean everything before we got home. (I am not making this up.) Kim
is off at college now, but we feel she's part of our family.
So "preserve sound judgment and discernment" and "the Lord will be your
confidence" (see Prov. 3:21-26). You can find a great sitterwith
prayer, some networking and a bit of on-the-job training.
Annette LaPlaca, associate editor of Marriage
Partnership magazine, is a mother of two and lives in the Chicago
area.
We'd really like to know what you think
about this article!
Is this the kind of article you'd like to see more
of?
Is there a topic you'd like us to cover?
Please send your suggestions
to
parentingfeedback@christianitytoday.com
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Copyright © 1998 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian Parenting Today Magazine. For reprint information
call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
parentingfeedback@christianitytoday.com.
Sept/Oct 1998, Vol.11, No. 1, Page 28
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