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Paid childcare

Discuss everything related to paid childcare here, including childminders, nannies, nurseries and au pairs.

Norland Nannies

68 replies

bertieboo · 02/05/2007 10:01

Has anyone on here ever employed a live in Norland Nanny?

Any advice they can give me about them?

Thanks

OP posts:
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fifilou · 09/05/2007 11:27

A professional nanny is one that is qualified, experienced and works hard for the family that employs her/him.

My career as a nanny has been both rewarding and demanding. I love my job and I think it's important that all professional nannies stick together.

NNEBs (old school pre 1993 where there was an exam) are hard to come by these days, and charge a fair price as they have experience and a recognised qualification.

NNEBs are qualified Nursery Nurses and have trained over two years in all sectors of childcare. They have a great knowledge or child development, health issues and education.

Norlands are trained as nannies, they are well respected and also 'old school'.

A good nanny is hard to find. A professional one -even harder! I would recommend interviewing as many as possible and always check refererences, then check them again. I have heard awful stories of fake qualifications never checked and fake references.

I wish you all the best in finding a wonderful nanny! There are lots of us out there!

I have been with my family (live out) for over six years!I am NNEB qualified and am also studying towards a Ba (hons) degree in childcare and youth studies. I have also won two awards from the professional nanny of the year awards in 2005 and 2006.

yeahinaminute · 09/05/2007 11:51

The College is in Bath and from their web site it shows the glorious Georgian Villa and garden it occupies - what it doesn't show is that it is slap bang next to Morrisons car park !!

The "gals" are fab - some friends of mine have been placement families for several years ( free childcare !!)

BUT - it's £3559 per term - for 6 terms over a 2 year period to send your child to Norland College - a staggering £21,354 which does not include accommodation !

Although - from the girls I've met - they really do know their stuff and are excellently taught.

Good Luck - go on to the web - site and you can register with the Norland Run agency
norland nannies

chocolateannie · 09/05/2007 14:03

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lockets24 · 10/09/2007 22:21

as a qualified Norlander myself, i can honestly say that you either have it or you dont when it comes to this job, it is about the kind of person you are not where you trained..believe me!

x

Meg14 · 23/04/2009 20:13

Hi everyone!

I'm training at Norland at the moment and, wih regards to the uniform, I totally agree with pretty much everything said.

Don't get me wrong, I LOVE it to bits because I'm proud what I do, but I wouldn't consider wearing it whilst working. My reasons for this are:

  1. As soon as you put on the uniform, you draw attention to the children. Nanny = potentially afluent family. This puts the children at risk.

  2. It ain't great for grubbing about in parks, potato printing, making fairy cakes, making bicarb of soda rockets and all the other messy play activities we love!

  3. I never want to be a trophy nanny. I want to be recognised for myself and my skills, rather than being a status symbol. Yeuch.

As for hiring a nanny, all I can say is that your best bet is trusting your instincts. Interview a wide range of nannies and don't stop looking until you're TOTALLY convinced that he/she's the right one for you and your family.

Good luck!
M
x

beatricerose · 29/04/2009 15:03

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BonsoirAnna · 29/04/2009 15:04

You need to put your post in "media requests" I think

marshalee · 29/04/2009 16:47

HI am a mummy and a nanny what you should be looking for is a nneb/cache level 3 qualified nanny.The only diff is the norland has paid go to college a good ageney is what you need like nannyworld.co.uk they are very good .

ThePrisoner · 29/04/2009 18:41

This thread is 2 years old!!!!

LHolly · 09/05/2009 18:18

Hi There!

I have just graduated and moved here from London. i love bath, its so beautiful and is a credit to england. however, i sometimes find myself in shock at certain things i see and the community. i have met some wonderful people but the ratio of wealth and status driven people is almost a requirement to live in bath. I am sure my southern accent baffles some residents, since i have had comments in my work place suggesting "im obviously not from round here", little do they know of my background and level of education. ANYWAY, it cracked me up to see a norland nannie in town the other day. It is so typical of bath to have such an institute, to raise status.

Obviously bath is not a subculture i am used to and i apologise for sounding patronising (but i need an opportunity to vent).

The poor girls in their uniform, i think its the colour of the uniform (brown) and white gloves that does it for me... hilarious. Those uniforms should be kept for graduating and ceremonies, since it is obviously a tradition which i totally respect although not for everyday studies.

I am stuck for words because i really do not understand the reason for the school? is it because bath is a place where general childcare is not adequate enough for the children of bath? what is wrong with any other college in childcare? norland's seems too fussy, fake and military... The girls need to go out and let loose... i suggest second bridge..!

Feel free to set me straight so i can learn to understand.

but i am a huge fan of bath, honestly one of the most gorgeous places in the country...!! woo..!

Love L

frannikin · 09/05/2009 22:34

The college didn't actually begin in Bath. I believe it began in Norland Square, London, before moving to somewhere in Herts and then Bath (for the student culture?).

Bath has nothing to do with college other than being the unfortunate town it's situated in.

PinkFairyDust · 09/05/2009 23:01

LHolly - Trust me we do go out in Bath - Revs, Poo's, Blue Rooms, CLub XL, Qube and 2nd bridge!

And i completey agree with Meg14 - we wear the uniform as we are proud of it but it is so not practical at all!

We have practical uniform which is trousers and jumper which is much better then the dress in all ways practical

x

BoffinMum · 10/05/2009 16:21

It only moved to Bath comparatively recently, around 2000 I think? The college previously had a lovely estate in Berkshire with its own nursery and children's hotel, where the kids could stay overnight without their parents. We used this in years gone by, as we don't have family who can give us a night off, and we are very fussy about who we leave the kids with. Our son was amazingly well looked after and seemed to have a lovely time.

We're applying for a probationer this year, so if any of you ladies are due to graduate, let me know and I'll give you the heads up on which family we are on the list if you like. I promise nobody will have to wear a uniform in this job!!

EBear · 22/07/2009 17:28

We have employed a live in Norlander with full charge of our daughter for two and a half years and hope she will stay with us for some time to come. We have also had a handful of other Norlanders "cover" while our nanny was on holiday, generally sourced by our own nanny. Without exception they have been fabulous - mature beyond their years, kind and thoughtful and a pleasure to have around. Most important, our daughter (now 4) is very happy with a great social life, lots of physical / creative activities, she is well behaved and has lots of support with reading etc. I have never seen any of them in their uniforms, aside from graduation photos!

emma1000 · 18/09/2009 12:00

I have had 3 Norland Nannies on placements and have found them all to be excellent! They have been professional, enthusiastic and able to use their own initiative. I cannot praise them highly enough.

immy1145 · 18/02/2011 19:05

I dont think people who havent had a Norland Nanny can say anything bad about them like; they are no better than anyone else, they are to old fashiond, they are doing it for the money or doing it for the status.
The Girls at Norland College have to go through a rigorous selection process before even an interview, then they must then study extremley hard for up to four years to receive their diplomas.
I think you can only comment if you have had a Norland Nanny, otherwise you are making assumptions about an organisation that you dont fully ungerstand.
I personally have had a Norland Nanny on more than one occasion and found all the girls to be, caring, loving and polite. They all knew exactly what they were doing and i trusted them completley.
My Norlanders all had a full understanding of nutrition, all my childs meals were made from scratch (a far better job than i could have done) and all have training in medical field, which put my mind to rest when my children were ill.
Before hiring my first Norland Nanny i had one found through an agency and she was unreliable, rude and just didnt have the level of experience and care that the Norlanders all seem to graduate with.
I can not recomend them highly enough, they are all a credit to the organisation.
Anyone considering a Norland Nanny, after you have interviewd one and compared her to a nanny from a 'normal' agency, you will see the difference. The Norland Girls are wonderful.

nannynick · 18/02/2011 19:08

Dug up from the past - Sept 2009 was the last post.
Guess you must have been specifically searching for Norland Nannies being mentioned. Why Girls, Norland take boys as well last I read.

sunshinenanny · 18/02/2011 21:37

In one of my jobs I worked alongside two very nice Norland nannies who were brilliant at their jobs.
I agree with everything immy1145 says, some of the comments sound just bitchy.
How can you comment on these beautifully trained nannies if you know nothing about their trainingHmm
To me the fact that they are willing to pay so much for their training shows commitment not snobbery.

cinpin · 18/02/2011 23:07

I think NorlanDs go into nannying because they really want to. I was talking to a school leaver who said she might get into childcare bnecause the careers advisor said it was an easy exam to pass.

Having met a few I think they are really professional.
.

SnapFrakkleAndPop · 19/02/2011 04:38

There are good Norlanders and bad Norlanders, just like there are good other nannies and bad other nannies. It depends on what suits your family. Going to Norland doesn't make them particularly wonderful, special, polite, hard-working or fabulous with children - that would be like saying going to Oxford makes you clever. The selection process is designed to find people with that profile and hones those skills.

anewyear · 20/02/2011 18:52

Childcare course on the YTS (Youth Training Scheme) LA schools plus Montessori
Ran the local village Youth Club
NNEB trained,
Have been a Nanny to two families
Assistant to Matron at a prep school
Mother of 2 (12 &9)
Ran our village Mother & Toddler group
Have been a School Gov, and a LSA at said school
and now a Ofsted Registered Childminder of 3 years
and hope to start mentoring children with behavioural problems in the near future.

Didnt need any Norland training for any of that

Off topic but out of intrest, what was the name of the other Nanny training collage, they also wore a Uniform, think it began with a C???

nannynick · 20/02/2011 19:55

Chiltern

SnapFrakkleAndPop · 21/02/2011 08:35

There was also Princess Christian, now defunct. Chiltern wear blue, PC I think were also brownish/beige.

anewyear · 21/02/2011 17:37

Thanx Nick thats the one Grin

anewyear · 21/02/2011 17:38

Princess Christian, blimey never heard of that one.