An introduction to babysitting

By angela fernandez 

Special to The Millerton News

 

millbrook — Although it’s the middle of the summer, children at the Millbrook Free Library are ready to learn, acquire new skills — and even earn a babysitting certification. On Saturday, July 25, the Millbrook Free Library hosted a program for children ages 10 and older, which taught the basics of babysitting.

Amanda Tucker, the teacher and creator of the course, has been teaching her “Intro to Babysitting” course for about a year now. She has been invited to teach at 18 libraries in the Mid-​Hudson Library System.

Tucker, a kindergarten teacher in Brewster, was first approached by the Patterson Library last June. Tucker had been involved in previous programs at the Patterson Library, so the director and program coordinator there asked if she’d be willing to put together a babysitting course and teach it to local adolescents. 

Tucker accepted, compiling her research with her very own experience. With three years of kindergarten teaching experience under her belt, Tucker has had ample experience with the various problems that a baby sitter could encounter.

She said she feels that putting the course together has been a way for her to share her knowledge and experience with children who are just beginning to get curious about childcare. Most of the students who Tucker gets are between the ages of 11 and 13. Since they’re not quite old enough to have “real” jobs, Tucker said babysitting is a great way for them to start earning money and gaining responsibility. 

Tucker’s course teaches interview tips, communication skills, the ages and stages of children, safety, first aid, feeding and changing diapers. The course not only focuses on safe childcare practices, but in developing the prospective baby sitters’ independence. 

“We prepare for the ‘what ifs,’” explained Tucker, “for any situation where kids this age are handling even smaller children, there are lots of little responsibilities that need to be accounted for.” 

The children who participated in the program at the Millbrook Free Library were Olivia Fried, 11, Madeline Marchant, 10, Mia Socci, 11, and Emily Mayo, 11. 

The course allowed students to develop and apply their skills instantly. Tucker encouraged the girls to help their parents out at home with their newly acquired skills. Now that they have some basic knowledge, she said, they can be helpful assets at home, especially with their younger siblings. 

The girls themselves were excited to take their skills and put them to work at home. Even though many of them have younger siblings and have seen the different practices done before, they left the library with a more thorough understanding of just how involved childcare is. 

“We learned the do’s and don’t’s of babysitting,” said Fried. “We worked on making sure that we’re always safe with the little kids.”

As they shared ideas on how to handle difficult situations, the girls always returned to the idea that as baby sitters, they need to set a good example. Ultimately, the girls equated success as baby sitters with being good role models for the children they’re caring for.

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