I think the problem is the inconvenience. Many preschools do not wish to allocate more manpower and resources to attend to sick child separately, call the parents and have the sick kid sent home. I wonder if it can be done when the parents personally send the children to the preschools so that if the child is found to be sick, the parent can be asked to take back the child right away. But some preschools have pick-up and drop-off services so the irresponsible parents can be sneaky and disappear once their kids get bundled into the bus.BedokAmerican wrote:My 2-yr-old started half days at preschool/day care a few weeks ago and has been ill quite a bit and has missed lots of days. I feel like I'm wasting money because he's been absent so much, but I know the school needs payments to hold his space. The only reason I put him in preschool so young was because he was bored at home and we ran out of things to do around the area because he eventually got tired of everything.
Each time I'm at the school, I see at least one kid that sounds like they're coughing up a lung. I checked the written policy on sickness that is given to parents upon enrollment and it says that children displaying signs of illness are to be kept home and it has clear examples of symptoms. It seems the school isn't following their own policies by not sending that kid home and that his/her parent isn't following the rules either.
Also, the temperature on each child is supposed to be checked upon arrival. I saw a blog online and a parent admitted to giving their sick child a dose of Panadol an hour or so before drop off so they'd pass the "temperature check" and then hoped the school staff wouldn't notice when their child's fever spiked once the medication wore off. I wouldn't be surprised if this is a widely used practice. But even so, a child can be ill and still not have a fever.
I understand small kids get sick a lot and that it'll supposedly build immunities, blah, blah, blah. I don't understand why parents send sick kids to school and why the school doesn't put their foot down. Expats usually have one parent not working and/or a maid. Most locals live their whole lives with their parents & grandparents (and might have a maid as well) so someone is generally around to watch the ill kid. Attendance records aren't kept until the child gets much older.
In your experience, do preschools/day cares in Singapore really enforce their sick policies? Are the schools scared to stand up to the parents and stick to their rules?
I've seen both ends of the spectrum. One preschool would let anyone in, even a child that was coughing, snarling and almost giving off animal sounds. The poor kid couldn't even stop for a straight two seconds. But a quick discussion between the auntie and the teacher on door duty... and the child comes marching in.BedokAmerican wrote:In your experience, do preschools/day cares in Singapore really enforce their sick policies? Are the schools scared to stand up to the parents and stick to their rules?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest