That makes sense. So I guess it’d probably be good to read a book or two on childcare and maybe get some experience doing something lower stakes like babysitting for a night at a time first.
From there it seems to me like a) you’d be able to find someone to let you babysit for a week and b) you’d have enough knowledge and experience such that the experiment would provide useful information. What do you think?
Going from zero to a week is a bad idea, but it would be fine to start with supervised time, move on to babysitting for an evening, then to a sleepover, and go from there. Repeat for a few nights.
There is definitely skill involved—I couldn’t be a daycare teacher. But those people are working multiple children. The job is much easier with a 1:1 child:adult ratio.
That makes sense. So I guess it’d probably be good to read a book or two on childcare and maybe get some experience doing something lower stakes like babysitting for a night at a time first.
From there it seems to me like a) you’d be able to find someone to let you babysit for a week and b) you’d have enough knowledge and experience such that the experiment would provide useful information. What do you think?
Going from zero to a week is a bad idea, but it would be fine to start with supervised time, move on to babysitting for an evening, then to a sleepover, and go from there. Repeat for a few nights.
There is definitely skill involved—I couldn’t be a daycare teacher. But those people are working multiple children. The job is much easier with a 1:1 child:adult ratio.
This also has the advantage that you and the child get to know each other, which is a big thing.