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What Should I Consider When Hiring a Babysitter? |
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Many parents find hiring a babysitter to be somewhat difficult. We are all concerned with our children’s personal safety, and we worry that a babysitter may not have the experience or make our children feel comfortable when we leave. There are several things to consider before hiring a babysitter. Parents should treat hiring a babysitter like hiring someone for any position. First, be certain to interview several candidates. If you are looking to hire a relatively young babysitter, you may want to look for kids who have been through babysitter training and are certified in infant and child CPR. Before hiring, solicit applications to maximize the group to select from. As you evaluate applications consider the experience of the babysitter, whether they have available references, and whether they can drive. These considerations can help make the choice of whom to interview simpler. Choose at least a moderately experienced babysitter, who has verifiable references and can drive. Look for special babysitter training, and if you like someone without CPR training, consider offering to pay for a course before the sitter works in your home. When you have chosen some likely candidates, then move onto the interview process. While conducting an interview, ascertain that the potential babysitter makes eye contact when speaking to you, and is able to communicate clearly. Make up a list of questions to ask. As well, ask the babysitter about his or her family background, and what type of parenting and discipline methods his or her family employs. If a babysitter’s family disciplinary type is very different from your own, the candidate may not be a good choice. Check references on each babysitter applying for the job. You may also want to meet the parents of babysitters under 18 to see what they are like, and get more information about their child. This may help you clarify your choice. In some states in the US, you can actually require and get fingerprinting for any babysitter who will work for you for more than 15 hours a week. Also, check the free Megan’s Law website list of Sex Offenders prior to hiring a sitter who is over 18. You may want to consider having a trial run with several babysitters to determine who works well with your children. Consider an hour’s time when the babysitter can come in and be a mother’s helper. Busy yourself in other parts of the house but make frequent checks to see how the children are getting along with the potential babysitter. If anything in this trial period causes unease, don’t hire the sitter. Once a babysitter is chosen, do not plan on actually spending that much time away from home. In fact, come back to the home at least once unexpectedly to see if the babysitter is performing the required job. If anything occurs which is opposite to your requirements, then stay home and fire the sitter. After the babysitter has had a solo run with the children, inquire about what they did. Ask the children if the babysitter did anything to upset them or annoy them. Ask if the babysitter stayed on the phone or played with them. If play is the answer, ask them what kinds of games. Observe children closely over the next few days to see if they exhibit abnormal or strange behavior signifying possible physical or sexual abuse. If in doubt, do not hire the babysitter again. You can spend some extra money and put nanny cams in the house without telling the sitter. You might consider this especially if the sitter has few references. Unfortunately some children are sexually or physically abused by sitters, which means caution should be observed by all parents.
Written by
Tricia Ellis-Christensen
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