Any advice welcome...
We recently had an au pair start with us, to help look after my 3 1/2 year old and baby-to-be (due in Nov.), as well as helping with housework. Up till now we have had nannies, who've had various levels of experience (no formal training for any of them, though). We decided to go with an au pair now because I'm about to go on maternity leave for 4-6 months, and we felt that with the baby it would probably be simpler to have someone live in, and of course with no salary coming in from me we were concerned about cost (my company pays only statutory maternity pay).
The problem is that this woman, while very pleasant, seems unable to keep my son engaged for more than a very short time, largely I think due to language issues (and maybe inexperience with kids his age, though in theory she has looked after kids the same age before). It has become clear that she has a lot of difficulty communicating with him, and the idea that she would think up activities to do with him, impose discipline on him (not that he needs a lot of this, but he is 3 after all), or encourage manners or anything of that sort seems like a distant dream. Her English is minimal, and an intensive English course we paid to send her to seems to have had little impact, and she is not interested in eating any meals with the family or spending any time with any of us outside of her contracted work hours.
As her friends here seem to all be from her home country, I have few hopes that her English will improve much, and would not feel comfortable leaving her alone with my son for a full day (which I had hoped to do sometimes), let alone having her look after a baby. I'm also not thrilled that she has made no effort to pitch in and help with anything around the house unless specifically asked/instructed to do so. I feel a bit like we have a boarder in rather than an au pair.
Were our expectations just totally unrealistic? I'm finding I need to spend so much time fending off my son (I'm still trying to work from home, but getting nothing done) and explaining the most basic things to au pair (e.g., 15-minute instructions required on how to prepare child's dinner every night as she can't cook at all) that it's kind of defeating the purpose of her being here. Aside from (or perhaps related to) the communication problems, she doesn't seem very outgoing or able to show any initiative at all, other than in organising her own social life. She is perfectly nice, otherwise.
Any thoughts, from any of you who have more au pair experience than we do?