As someone else asked (but no one has yet to answer) do you sit in the room with your babies at home so they are never out of sight?That is an awfully low ratio. Is that the state mandate where you live?? Ours is 1:6 for infants so 2 adults and 10 kids still meet the requirement. Typically what our center does is staff the rooms so that they have enough to make ration and check on the sleeping babies every 5-10 min. The door between the two rooms stays open and the cribs are on the wall opposite the door so they can look in the room at any time and see the children in the cribs.I'm curious -- how did that work for staffing? Did you always have one dedicated sleep monitor but enough staff to cover the remaining babies with appropriate ratios?
In other words, say you have a 1:4 ratio and 12 babies in a room. You would need three full time adults in that room. If there are 2 sleeping babies that needs one adult to supervise, how many adults are caring for the remaining 10? Two or three? Because as a parent I'd have a big problem with one person sitting there watching babies sleep while two adults are running ragged trying to care for 10 babies between them.
And it honestly shocks me that some on this thread expect their SLEEPING babies to be watched at all times.As someone else asked (but no one has yet to answer) do you sit in the room with your babies at home so they are never out of sight?
Isn't it a law that daycare rooms need 2 forms of egress in case of fire? I would NOT be comfy with no window in the room. God forbid there was a fire and they couldn't get to the room from the hallway or what have you. I
That is an awfully low ratio. Is that the state mandate where you live??
Our daycare had such an arrangement. Several of the newer daycare centers in our area do. I want to also note that it seemed so completely strange and awful to me when a friend told me her daycare didn't have a seperate sleeping room, so I think these things are largely just a matter of what you're used to.
In our daycare they had to check sleeping infants every 5 minutes, and there was a chart on the door to record those checks. There was no door on the room, just a cloth curtian and I always felt more comfortable with my child having a quiet, peaceful, dark place to sleep becuase it is more homelike to me. At home my kids nap in thier own rooms without constant supervision, so I didn't have a problem with the babies napping in a quiet room without constnat supervision. When the kids get a little older, at the 12 month mark or so, they sleep out in the main room on a scheduled naptime on a cot, just like they will when they move to a toddler room.
Our daycare is excellent, I have been very happy and satisfied with the care they have given our children. They try and make everything as home like a possible - meals are served family stye, children have to use table manners and eat with utensils from the time they are old enough to eat table food. My kids love thier center and thier teachers.
I think this is one of those things were people will say "i'd be uncomfortable" but really its about what you've done and seen in the past. Examine what really is unsettling about that scenario. If "the other centers don't do that" is the reason, I wouldn't let that stop me from enrolling my child at an otherwise great center. I guess what I'm trying (ineptly) to say is to evaluate the center and programs as a whole. I wouldn't get hung up on this as a deal breaker.
That is what it was in MN and CA. I moved to NM next where the ratio was more like yours. I changed jobs. I think 6 infants for one adult is absolutely insane.
I did it for 4 years and never had a problem. I was the preschool teacher, but would fill in at least once a week in the infant room . You just have to be doing your job at all times. As long as you are the kids are getting eveything they need, including play time and stimulation. If you are not interested in doing that you shouldn't be working with kids anyway. It is actually very doable.
I worked for 3 years, full time, in a daycare setting with infants. And I could not disagree more. With all due respect, filling in once a week does not give you a real picture of what goes on in there.
We were busy constantly even with a 4:1 ratio. I do not think you can give quality care with a 6:1 ratio. There simply is not enough time to do much more than have their basic needs met.
Do you really think an infant only requires 10 minutes of attention every hour?
Indiana's law is 1:4 and accredited centers are 1:3. (At least it was when I taught preschool a few years ago!)We are in the process of touring daycare centers for our baby that is due in October. We have a 5 year old son so we have been down the daycare route before but I have found something this time that makes me cringe a little. We have toured two of them now where they have seperate sleeping rooms for the infants. I am used to the 1/2 wall or something where the staff can actually see the kids sleeping. These sleeping rooms are actual seperate rooms where they put the kids to sleep with an audio monitor so they can hear if someone is awake.
This made my DH and I really nervous. I cannot see sending my child somewhere that they were put in a crib, the door shut and they were left to themselves. One of them looked like a closet with a bunch of cribs, no windows in the room at all. It was really strange.
What would you think of this? Are we overreacting to this?
Kristine
...And for everyone's sanity it is good to have a room that is quiet for those babies who are trying to sleep.

I would also feel really uncomfortable with infants sleeping in a room with a closed door. In the event of a fire, chances are that the teachers will rescue the kids that are closest at hand and then have to go back for the kids that are in the seperate room. I think that is common survival tactics - save those first that have the most chance before going back for those with lesser chance.
I felt really awful when I read about the fire in Mexico that engulfed a state run daycare. The fire started in the business that shared the building with the daycare and the daycare only had one entrance/exit that was functional - the front door. There was a back door that was bolted shut. The sprinklers and fire alarm were either non-existant or not functional and it only took about 5 minutes for the building to be engulfed in flame. God forbid something like that should ever happen to anybody's child but accidents do happen.
Mexico Daycare Fire
Yes, most parents who care for their own children at home put them to sleep in their own room and leave the room to do other things. But 1 - this is your own child whom you are 100% aware of and is your #1 priority, 2 - you would not forget about your child in the event of an emergency, 3 - you know your home and have a plan of action in the event of an emergency, 4 - you are relying on yourself and not someone else to make important decisions about your child.
In theory, I'd be more comfortable with my child sleeping in a seperate room with a home care provider if there weren't too many kids there at the infant stage. But, my opinion on care providers is kind of skewed towards over-protective since I don't trust very many people with my kids anyway. We don't have a regular babysitter and only go out when family visits or on the infrequent ocassion that I ask my close friends to sit so I can go to a Dr appt.