|
|
|
|
Q
|
How do I know if my child is mature enough to babysit?
|
|
A
|
Readiness to babysit is
not a specific age but a stage in development. There are lots of
things to consider. For example:
|
|
|
-
Does
my child seem capable enough to handle the responsibilities of
caring for a younger child? Is my child able to stay in
control of him/herself and in control of the younger children;
i.e. handling an infant who won't stop crying?
-
Is
my child able to practice safe habits for the younger child
and him/herself? Is my child able to handle household
situations; i.e. typical things that can happen such as
telephone calls, someone at the door? Would my child
feel comfortable at someone else's home alone (no adults)
after dark?
-
Is my child
able to listen to and follow instructions? (Does my
child feel comfortable talking to adults?)
-
Is my child
able to be an advocate for him/herself; i.e. knowing his/her
limits?
-
Does my child
want to start babysitting? Has my child actually asked
to babysit? Does my child enjoy younger children?
Do younger children naturally gravitate to my child?
It's important to
stress the seriousness of babysitting to your child when making this
decision. When your child accepts the responsibility of
babysitting, he/she is accepting the responsibility for a child's life.
|
|
Q
|
What should my child know before babysitting?
|
|
A
|
- It is absolutely essential your child
knows how to rescue a choking child and be able to handle a
life-threatening emergency; i.e. when and how to call 911.
The Safe Sitter® program was started because a toddler died from
choking while in the care of an adult babysitter.
- In addition to handling
life-threatening emergencies and care of the choking child, the
Safe Sitter® course includes rescue of a choking infant, the
business and ethical aspects of babysitting, safety for the
babysitter and the children, injury prevention, basic first aid,
how to care for children, and behavior management.
- If Safe Sitter® is not available in your
area, be sure you pick a babysitting course for your child that
includes the above content.
- If there isn't a babysitting course
available in your community or if the only babysitting course
available doesn't include how to rescue a choking child, your
child needs to take a course in child CPR.
- Your child needs to know that every
time your child accepts the responsibility of babysitting, he/she
is accepting the responsibility for a child's life. Your
child also needs to know that babysitting means watching the
children at all times and obeying the house rules.
- Your child needs to know babysitting is
fun and very rewarding!
|
|

Safe Sitter® is a nonprofit, 501 (c)(3)
organization. Copyright © 2008 by Safe Sitter, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
This page was last updated
01/10/08
|