Varies by state and age? My very red state does not allow a group of 40, full stop. The largest group allowed is for 3-year-olds, with a 1:15 adult:child ratio. For younger children, the ratios and group sizes are smaller.
I was off on the 4-5 though. Ratio for < 1 yo is 1:6.
Anyway, this is all to the point that it's nothing like the 1-2 in in-home care. There's a reason nannies are associated with richer people.
Bullshit. Most US states have strict staff ratio limits for properly licensed daycare facilities. The exact ratios vary by state but typically this is something like 1:4 for infants up to 1:14 for school-age children.
Varies by state and age? My very red state does not allow a group of 40, full stop. The largest group allowed is for 3-year-olds, with a 1:15 adult:child ratio. For younger children, the ratios and group sizes are smaller.
I was off on the 4-5 though. Ratio for < 1 yo is 1:6.
Anyway, this is all to the point that it's nothing like the 1-2 in in-home care. There's a reason nannies are associated with richer people.
Given the cost of out of home childcare, three kids more than pays for a nanny. Even two can.
Not exactly a “rich” thing, just a matter of “scale” (in YC terms).
In California, at least, those numbers wouldn't be acceptable.
My daughter's at an in-home daycare with IIRC five or six other kids. There are two adults there full-time, sometimes three.
Two adults supervising 20-40 daycare-aged kids is simply not feasible.
Depends on the state and child age. California is on the stricter end of legally mandated ratios:
0-18 months: 1:3
18 months to 3 years: 1:4
3-5 years: 1:5
Bullshit. Most US states have strict staff ratio limits for properly licensed daycare facilities. The exact ratios vary by state but typically this is something like 1:4 for infants up to 1:14 for school-age children.