@@jessh5661 “Jack of all trades, master of none” is often used as some sort of insult, but the full statement is “Jack of all trades, master of none, though oftentimes better than master of one.” Showing that being mostly good at many things is better than being great at one thing and terrible at everything else.
The special forces of nannies. So badass. A personal chef, bodyguard, nurturer, hospitality, sewing & other legitimate trades etc. Glad their paid well.
@@aleksanderzalar1195 what if they aren't being serious because it's an interview? everyone could get shy when a camera is pointing at them. When you look at 1:15, it looks like they aren't actually being serious at all. they can even drift a car, that one is an another kind of feat.
@@carstenhansen5757 yeah they can, sometimes good skills is all it takes, even teenage girls have been able to defeat grownman with some selfdefence or sports skill.
I want a Netflix series about a nanny like this, protecting probably a rich kid who is prone to kidnapping or just a normal kid who is unaware of what a Black Widow nanny they have.
The first thing I thought after she described the nannies as Mary Poppins with a little bit of James Bond was "tell me you wouldn't watch that series".
imagine thinking a nanny is an easy mugging target then she starts drifting the car, slams into you, gets out the car and lifts you up by the neck with one hand lmao
The last young lady interviewed is exactly what every parent wants in a nanny! A person who is passionate and excited about the way their child sees the world! Well done young lady!
@Sergeant you usually only train to fight in situations where escape is not an option. Even then you learn not to defeat but to distract so you can run away. I hardly think they teach them to start a fight when fleeing is an option.
@@treyi1794 I'm loving the story development. Are the parents aware or unaware that their child is missing and were they responsible for the child or is the child just the child of a high profile person or someone both individuals care about that maybe works at bopth schools?
As someone who lives with a nanny, you either love helping kids or hate them because my sister is one and I can't stand children. Like literally I have panic attacks from a past event
@@DD-lc8ei Ah I didn't know a "nanny" could also be dudes if that's what you're saying but never seen a male Nanny and that's what I call my grandmother sometimes since I was little so I was used to thinking Nanny's we're typically women
@@DD-lc8ei I'm not sure anyone would really be upset however that a Nanny Profession is specifically for women, it's not like there aren't professions dominated or specific for men like being a male heavy weight boxer or WWE fighter or construction worker or worker in a harsher and more strength requiring environment.
Thing is, at 10 bucks an hour, for 24 hours a day, if you do that line of work for a 4 week period, you are already looking at 6720$. Even at just 8 bucks, 5376$. Now, let’s say you work for 8 hours / 6 days a week at 12 / 15 bucks an hour for 4 weeks, you still make a very decent 2304$ or 2880$ per month. Pretty sweet gig if one is into the line of work.
@@Arcaryon 2300 or 2880 is not a lot of money a month, especially for this kind of work. They earn a lot more apparently, more like 14000$ which seems insane. But 2800$ in the UK is not a lot of money…
@@dutchdaleyy I am not talking about the absolute elite here, but rather about the bottom potential of being a full time nanny. I should have specified, my bad. It’s not a lot but it’s a very good amount. And at the aforementioned 6720$, you are already looking at 80640$ a year. Not amazing but for a line of work most people on the face of the planet do for free, that’s quite high already. At 30$ an hour with a, let’s say, 10 hour/6days ( which would probably be quite low, considering they would most likely take care of the children for basically 24/7 minus school where they would still work as caretakers and prepare a lot of things etc. ) that’s I am not talking about the absolute elite here, but rather about the bottom potential of being a full time nanny. I should have specified, my bad. It’s not a lot but it’s a very good amount. And at the aforementioned 6720$, you are already looking at 80640$ a year. Not amazing but for a line of work most people on the face of the planet do for free, that’s quite high already. Now, let’s go with the aforementioned 14.000$. A month with an average workload of 28 days has to pay 500$ a month. Which is a lot and yet, not a lot. Times 12 we end up at 16800$. Now, let’s go with 10 hour workdays; that’s “only” 50$ an hour. Compared to the average income in, say, the UK of workers, that is certainly a lot of money. The national annual average for employees over there was £38.600, which is currently 45.661,83 $ at _current_ exchange rates. The US employee average was 79.422$ in 2020. The issue being of course that the cost of living is hard to compare making salary comparisons not as accurate as people may think but of course, the aforementioned highest amount is a very, very good income.
The fact that it cost $21k a year and they’re calling that expensive makes me want to cry. I’m at a State College in the US and it’s more than that for a normal degree
@@gwenne2581 you either hope the field you're going into pays enough to pay it off over time, live with that debt for the rest of your life, or work with the government or a position that offers student loan forgiveness.
@@gwenne2581 Join the military and get paid to attend school. I got to travel the world and live out my Star Trek fantasies in real life Naval warfare scenarios working in aviation. Setting a Naval Aviation Milestone which will probably never be broken. Partied everywhere in Asia and Australia. Financially semi-retired by 38. The problem is that regular jobs suck for me now.
"So how's college?" "I get to learn self-defense, wicked driving techniques, and how to cook and massage like a pro." "What kind of school is that??" "Nanny school"
I'm very surprised by comments here. Nannies are some of the least appreciated and looked down upon of employees. Loving a child as if it was your own, investing your time, patience, care and knowledge into some one else's child has been my privilege for two decades. Norland Nannies are a status symbol, mostly employed by foreigners wanting to appear British. Majority of families are after warm, caring, patient nannies who share their values to help them bring up their children. Families live further away from one another and not everyone has the privilege of having their own parents able to help. We have First Aid Training, are DBS checked and have training on top of many other careers we initially trained for, bringing life experience into workplace. I spent 20 years in comfortable civilian clothing getting dirty in sandpits, muddy puddles and covered in food and paint, rolling down the hills and coming down the slides with children on my lap. Bringing up a little human being is a tremendous task! Nannies deserve way more pay and recognition than they are given credit for.
@@PhilipJFry-tm9ve Did you happen to have videos queued up on RUclips? I think there's a bug. Another video is playing but the comment section is for a different one.
I think having classes like these for everyone in highschool would be great. Like, dedicate a year (maybe an additional year before they graduate or something) where everyone is taught how to be a decent homemaker, and take care of a kid (maybe including mandatory volunteering in daycares or elementary schools). It'd set people up a lot better off as young adults, and I think it'd work as a pretty decent birth control for a lot of folks (children can be rewarding, but I imagine having to clean up after all of their various fluids would be a nice reality check for a very young adult who hasn't completely thought it through, and for the ones that do still want kids at that age, those kids will have knowledgeable parents). Naturally it wouldn't be as in depth, but a year of school dedicated to cooking, cleaning, sewing, understanding children, etc would do so many people so much good. (And to really clarify, when I say everyone, I mean every single person, not just women)
I like your idea. Make it a vocational class because really these skills can be applied across the board throughout any path in life & for both men and women. Your comment motivated my morning 💪 thank you
It was a thing some 30 years ago where i live but it is non existing practice today. Which is a shame. I think it would be a very useful thing to introduce back into the school program.
this school also gives them good lessons in cooking, child psychology, self-defense, and also prepares them for if they want to be moms themselves. Overall, very well rounded. Also the sewing can come in handy when stitching someone up.
@Baby Barbie yeah to teach them the whole nine yards of raising a kid, before they start popping them out. A lot of people (IMO) have kids before realizing how much work it is, and some regret it later.
@@Global_Havoc18 Yeah when the child is young people think “Oh, this is easy, I should have more.” Without knowing that when the child grows up things’ll get harder, and harder. It’s pretty sad.
@Baby Barbie Yeah and teach more family planning as well, my country have popped birth rate because for them family planning is something like abortion and im like wtf all the time, many people are uneducated, this education is a necessity to learn
I'm just happy housework and childcare are finally being acknowledged as a profession and are being compensated well. Even if it's just this very niche group.
You are lucky I spent 10 years of my life being forced to be other people's children's fathers and the last year I was doing it I had to beg my mother to pay half my rent so I could remain dry when it rained.
I think if someone is willing to enroll in this school and put so much effort into becoming the best nanny they can be, then they’re already great before they even receive the education! The school naturally attracts those who genuinely love kids 😆 I can imagine it’d be easy to make friends with such a sweet group
This honestly sounds like a dream come true for a person like me. I absolutely adore children and I used to babysit for free, the longest “job” I had was staying at the parents place for 2 weeks, the mother was in the hospital and the father had college and work, there were 3 toddlers under the age of 4, I woke up early every morning to cook for the father and kids and throughout the day I cooked for every meal and made sure it was healthy. I sowed some stuff, basically fixing holes in stuffed animals, clothes and blankets, it was a very lovely experience and the parents praised my work and I became the kids aunty, they thought I was they’re dad’s sister actually it was so sweet. I also once babysat 12 kids most around 5 and under, there was 1 kid that was 9 and I did it alone, it was absolutely anxiety inducing and I was certain something was going to go wrong but I was lucky and I was about to keep everything going perfectly. It’s something I put my everything into and I know if I heard of this college when I was a bit younger I would have tried to apply. I don’t want to be a mother due to being uninterested in dating or romance and if I have kids I’d like to be a stay at home mom so it’s just not in the cards for me but I still love children. This seems like a very fulfilling occupation and an honorable one too.
Come live with us in Puerto Rico ! We need help with our three boys, Michael 5, Marcello 4, and Matteo 3. Its a beautiful island and we will include a room and board, salary, medical insurance and car !
I didn't realize there was a school for this. How cool! There's even a school for butlers. Imagine graduating in both. You'll be like the most capable and competent person ever.
They basically learn everything from every day life, but cooler: cooking and sewing but pro way, driving but action movie style, protecting the kid but martial art style, soothing but made full on massage... the thing, is, the kids they take care of will probably think this is perfectly normal. They are kids with all the good stats from the start lol
Yes. ScarJo should redo that babysitting movie she did as Black Widow. Also I believe Mary Poppins had her own James Bond skills. That would have been the real MP II
I love how Business Insider curates such unique and informative content. This was a surprising find...love how these nannies are so well trained. Freja has an excellent outlook. Such a joy taking care of babies and kids.
these guys can make any boring thing into a edge of your seat blockbuster. Have you guys ever watched kids? THis is exactly that... lol wake up, this is just like glamourizing it. its just babysitting
@@hanniesung3595 yeah but the children with parents who can pay would most likely already be getting such enrichment. There's nothing wrong with them earning money, but they're not helping children, they're just working with clients
The sad thing is that this is an upper level thing, exclusive. All people working with children, having children, should have these skills! Physicians have a total of around 12 years (and specialists more) post secondary school, including residency... & they are responsible for other's lives. Nannies and parents are responsible for lives, but usually have abysmally poor training. Being a parent is a job & most people have little training.
I get what you're saying, and I agree. But physicians have greater responsibilities and greater risks. Whether it's a surgeon or medical doctor, they physically manipulate our bodies for healing. Nannies are almost like first responders compared to physicians. Yes, I hope they have incredible training, but I'd hope the doctor even more so has greater training. Not trying to argue or troll, and I totally agree that society should place much more emphasis on parenting and nannying.
@@queueeeee9000 my point was not the either/or you seem to be saying. I am not questioning that physicians need that amount of training. I completely support it and actually think some physicians need more training. I worked in critical care for over a decade. Suggesting that ALL children have support and safety, as those who have these higher trained nannies, is NOT a suggestion that physicians have less. To translate what I was saying in that manner is representative of a cognitive distortion (either/or, black/white) as well as scarcity mindset. It is limited thinking. I wouldn't personally correlate nannies to first responders...although I can see why some people would. Parents, and other caregivers, have a powerful impact on the foundation of a person. They form the foundation, the subconscious programming, and the whole trajectory of a person's life. In studying trauma, and it's impact on health consequences...the ACE's study is a great place to start...I saw that what is wholly missing in preventative care, is better foundations for children. From a neuroscience perspective, this starts prior to birth. If you understand epigenetics, trauma (as per Dr Gabor Mate), addiction, risky behaviors, self sabotaging health choices, and can tie it into the complexity of neural networks...then you'll get it. Yes, by all means, physicians (and supporting staff) need tons of education and training....however, this doesn't mean that parents and nannies don't. Physicians need much training AND parents and caregivers do also. Of course, it's different training. However, if all parents and caregivers had the appropriate training, that supported optimal brain, body, and all, to flourish and be safe....we'd have WAY less need for as many physicians! A huge proportion of disease, accidents, domestic violence, and on and on...originate from improper, ill-informed, damaging, parental/caregiver influence. Of course those parents learned much of that from their caregivers, parents too. In my work towards a PhD in neuroscience, breaking those cycles is at the forefront of all I do. It was when I worked critical care, I started seeing the connection. While I know you weren't trying to "troll", you also appear not to know a lot in this realm, the deep, multifaceted complexities that impact human development and health.
@@Alphacentauri819- I wasn't implying that I know the inner workings and multifaceted complexities of human development. I'm sorry if you felt like I was challenging your knowledge on the subject. I was merely commenting on your comment regarding physician training. You brought up the length of time physicians require for schooling and training. You're implying they are comparable on some level. I'm merely pointing out the differences. I'm not implying nannies don't need any. I'm questioning your comparison. That's all, mate:)
@@queueeeee9000 in my comparison...it wasn't to take away from physicians though. It was to add to the areas (without taking anything from anyone else) where it is sorely needed. The comparison was because there is a recognition that physicians need so much training and education, which is absolutely valid...and simultaneously a huge blindness to where more collective, foundational, societal, support is needed. The comparison wasn't intended the way it was taken...that's all :) It was basically a call to wake up...that we can value some areas that matter...let's value and provide support for other powerful areas that matter to general human well-being too 😊
I'd pay extra for a nanny that has training in: - self defense - safe driving (defensive) - First aid level 2 - cooking healthy foods - Early childhood teaching (I.e. montesorri)
@@corriedebeer799 but if its combined - the more you pay. otherwise, you would have to hire 3 or more people which costs more. although - what if they are sick sometimes? then you lose all professions at once ^^
@Akki Kishore that’s why I said if you make the cut, and no many middle class students who come from families that make $100,000 can get in for free or nearly free
@@amill1387 a lot of people lie in the gap where their parents make enough to exclude them from financial aid, but are also refusing to contribute. That leaves them unable to get needs based scholarships to hugely expensive places like that.
This honestly seems like a great school and career. You're paying a lot less than some schools in the US, but you become far better at practical skills and you likely end up with a higherpaying job too
2 Elon Musk has positioned himself as a fighter for the environment, but invests billions of dollars in maintaining and mining bitcoin. Although bitcoin mining takes 121.36 terawatt hours (terawatt hours) per year (which is more than the annual energy consumption of some countries), as well as the release of a huge amount of thermal energy when operating equipment for mining bitcoin and for generating electricity (for example, Wa Parish power plant, the largest coal-fired power plant in the United States, generates 4 thousand megawatt hours, that is, it needs 10 years of operation to provide an annual consumption for the total mining of bitcoin), which does not contribute to the fight against global warming. And where is the statement of the most famous environmentalists "How dare you". But it is interesting that in the US-controlled states and politicians who have carried out coups d'etat in their countries, or illegally dismissed presidents by changing power, each of them has open bitcoin wallets. And most of these revolutionaries - current governments and officials, have or have had connections with the US State Department and charitable foundations and foundations that provide financial support to countries, democracy and journalism (such as the Soros Foundation, the National Endowment for Democracy) and it is not in vain that Soros invests money in bitcoin, because it is almost impossible to track it. Now imagine billions of US taxpayers' dollars with the help of bitcoin transfers go to incomprehensible events and to the pockets of government representatives and gangs in countries that support racism, Nazism, there is no tolerance for representatives of different sexual orientations, and instead of introducing democratic norms, this money goes to corruption ... Billions of US taxpayers' dollars go into the pockets of so-called patriots in such countries as: Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Armenia, Tajikistan, Iran, Iraq, Czech Republic, Poland, Moldova, Lithuania, Latvia. And bitcoin ideally performs these functions, because it is almost impossible to track it, but do not forget that it carries another function - the function of a banal fraud (casino), because there are people who, on exchange rate fluctuations, receive excess profits (for example, one statement of support for bitcoin Elon Musk raised it is in price, and later, when he said that he didn’t support him that much, bitcoin dropped. Strangely enough, he received these billions by selling bitcoin at the peak of his growth, maybe he plays bitcoin roulette and on the trust of his fans, to make a profit)
Good to know that house chores and babycare are being acknowledge as a profession. Our mothers serves our family and that too without any respects and a single penny; it used to call as their "DUTY"
😂😂 it's good because they're so few in numbers . They're not in 100s or 1000s. They're in a specific program which doesn't has that much demand. A specific course for a need of specific kind of people.
This is basically learning how to live. They teach you how to cook, how to defend yourself, some first aid, how to drive, and how to solve some of the small things life throws at you like, sewing a button back on.
@@missmosie7565 @Space Bar I REMEMBERED IT!!! I remembered the cartoon!!! Duck Tales 2017! Mrs. Beakley was a former spy. I don't know why you thought it was the live-action movie "The Pacifier". 1) That is not a cartoon. 2) Vin Diesel's character was a Navy SEAL not a spy.
@@idek7438 I come from a wealthy family. Using bodyguards and stay at home nannies is more common that you think. Im 17 y old and since i remember i have had my Driver/bodyguard . I think this is preposterous but alot of wealthy kids have people protecting them.
My nanna (bio) was a norland nanny. She looked after a dukes children and regularly tells me about how she would take them to Buckingham palace for their ballet lessons with the princes.
I don't know if I'd love or hate being rich. On the one hand, I'd have enough money to hire a literal bodyguard for my children. On the other hand, I'd have enough money to NEED a literal bodyguard for my children
I mean you could be poor/middle class and still a lot of people could kidnap your child for sex-trafficking him/her, but you won’t be able to afford a ninja nanny to protect them. If you are rich you can afford safety, sure you could be a more juicy target for extortion, but with your money you can pay top notch technology to keep your house safe, the ninja nannies, a bodyguard, private security, and all of that stuff is a deterrent to people trying to kidnap your children for sex trafficking (what i mean is taht they’d rather kidnap a poor kid whose parents wont be able to do anything. Plus at the end of the day you can always pay the ransom if you need to. And in case you didn’t know, they also kidnap non-rich kids for ransom for way less money than you imagine (about 20 years ago a middle class little girl was kidnap in my country and the kidnappers asked for 10k USD, they paid it and got her back, but omg i don’t understand how could anyone do that for just 10k! Im sure this kind of kidnaps are extremely rare tho, i haven’t heard of anything similar happening ever again, at least here)
You dont “need” to actually. If you go out with super sparkly jewelry then you probably will need bodyguards but if you are just a rich guy with normal lifestyle and you are not that famous then no need to worry
Usually only if you‘re actually LIVING the rich lifestyle. If you have much money, but live and look like a normal dude then most people won‘t even know that you have money. (Of course that only works if you didn‘t get your money from something that gave you celebrity status)
@@anthonyrobert1376 It also depends on how crime is in your country, and how much criminals have to fear apprehension. If your in a bad neighborhood in Chicago, hustlers and kidnappers can tell your class by how your hand moves when you sneeze and tell how experienced you are with any of the deterrents available to the area are by your voice even if you train not to use a accent. As a pretty general rule if your in a area with nannies, no matter your country, criminals don't even have to fear the police
Basically, after graduating you'll have a variety of high level skills which means you can pretty much work in many different fields aside from being a nanny.
even if there skills went transferable there trained to work for a very specific high paying clientell. why be a teacher when dummy billionare no5 will pay u 50k to pick their kid up from school.
Most robbers are just opportunistic. If their uniform was normalized and known by most people as elite nannies, it already serves as a deterrent for most robbers. My logic to that is similar to locks, Ever heard of a saying "A lock only keeps honest people out"?. It's true, any person whose determined and ready to go to prison is gonna rob someone's belongings using whatever means necessary however since most robbers are just opportunistic a decent looking lock is able to deter them. Except that these nannies are really capable in protecting what they need to protect.
I'm sure they don't wear these uniforms when they go out to play with the kid in the mud. It's more of a status statement when you work for a wealthy family. I can imagine that if I was invited to a royal's house, it would be helpful to know this lady is a nanny, so I don't have to bow to her.
I love that they learn sushi. When my son was small we lived in a coop house with a Korean student. She made sushi and my little son would sit with her just fascinated by the bright and colorful fingerfoods. She was so happy that he loved her cooking that she made him a sushi tower before leaving at the end of term. Sushi can be a nearly perfect toddler snack. My son is now 26 and still loves sushi ♡
Your son sounds lovely. Is he single? I come from Japan where they serve actual sushi. What he learned was kimbap, the Korean one, as the one who commented above mentioned. Equating sushi to kimbap is like calling Sheppard's pie a steak and mash potatoes 🤣
ooh then for you I'd recommend the Gallagher Girls Series. it's about a prep school that looks like a normal school to everyone but those who are at it. it's where future female FBI agents get trained and learn things for the job, such as several languages, disguises, hacking, and of course combat. I think you'd like it!
@@aomnomnom never heard of it, but checking it out now. There is a steampunk (YA) series that is similar (kinda). Finishing School by Gail Carriger. Volume 1 is Etiquette and Espionage.
"They can make up to 170,000 a year" *me: "I'll join!🙋🏼♀️"* "However it's more expensive that Oxford or Cambridge college. Oh and you can't buy fast food either" *me: " haha, nope"🚪🚶🏼♀️*
Wow. Oxford and Cambridge, but not all of us have the brain power for Ox and Cam, either or the intellectual interest to go the distance. Education requires passion or commitment.
It's like Black Widow training facility, but for nannies. Now that would be a great movie! A nanny that has the child stolen, but goes into 'TAKEN' mode to get the child back. Lol
The TV show Black Lagoon Seasons 2 and 3 already have a story line about this exact premise. Although it's technically an elite maid, not nanny. It's on Hulu US and Netflix UK.
@@cupofjoen yeah, the US is fucked. Patriarcy and billionaires have ruined it. I support life skills being taught in school. Not just government propaganda
0:01 I get it but none of these first three things really have anything to do with compassion and everyday child rearing. Being a nanny is about experience, but there is also a certain quality that can't be taught. Kindness, compassion, and a true love and joy for children
We had all the same training at the English Nanny and Governess School in Ohio. I had 12 wonderful years in this profession then married and have my own wonderful family.
All this training is wonderful. I fully commend it. However, I will say that the most important quality of a nanny is her ability to LOVE your children and a well balanced mindset. My nanny was our house hold servant who cooked and cleaned as well as keep an eye on me, especially when my Mum was working. She was not trained to be a nanny. but she loved me and all her actions in terms of guiding and disciplining me were guided by that LOVE. So, she never allowed me to be a brat because that would be bad for me when I went to school and as an adult. But she gave me the time and space to be the child I was with my own unique personality. I learnt about how to do a good job from her. This was 55 years ago. So I learn't to wash clothes by hand, clean a fish, bake a cake, fry an egg, wash vegetables, sweep the floor, make bread, sew quilts etc etc to a high standard. No forcing required. It was play and when I had enough playing with water (and there's a lot of water play when you wash clothes by hand or wash vegetables or play with a broom), then that was that. But somehow, in the process of this play, I learnt that whatever I did had to be done well. I learnt many of my values from her and they have served me well all my life. In case you are wondering, yeah, my relationship with my mother was not as close as it could be but I'm not sure if it ever could have been. My mother was not neglectful or anything. But she was simply not as present because of her particular personality and issues. I would be a different person without my Nanny. I loved her. I still miss her.
I want this to be a Netflix show. I grew up learning all of these various skills from my over protective dad who decided teaching his 4 year old son things that marines learn was a crucial part to growing up. 🤦 With a little extra maternal knowledge added by my mom, like sewing, cooking, cleaning, and humility through ones own failure. I've always thought people with excessive sets of skills like these really excel in childcare as long as the person has a love for children to understand their basic needs as well as being able to handle practically anything under the sun.
Making the nanny wear that identifiable uniform is an extremely bad idea because it may draw unwanted attention. That uniform becomes a walking billboard to identify wealthy families (i.e. kidnapping opportunities). If these nannies worked for me, I’d ask that they wear unassuming clothing while out with the children for safety.
Thinking more than likely if the family is able to afford the nanny then the child might also have it's own security team or bodyguard. At least that's what I would do as the parent. I'm not putting all my trust in just the nanny to protect my children.
I think the uniform helps to keep the baddies away. Yes it does tell you the kid has rich parents, but it also tells you the wearer is capable of breaking your neck!
@@yujuti8416 I agree with Bridgette. At least hire someone who can carry a firearm, if the families truly concerned with kidnapping/ransom. This driver training is basically what the secret service get in the states
@@yujuti8416 yes but these high profile families also attract high profile kidnappers... who will have a similar skillset to the nanny, more than likely, and can overpower her. these nannies are not actual unbeatable superheroes.. just more trained for self-defence than the average person.
I'm american, no kids and yet I find this to be very informative and necessary for any parent or parent to be, or even for babysitting. "It's a dangerous world.."
@@jarjarbinks4243 keep a gun under your pillow and your toddler will find that quicker than anything I swear. Want your kids alive…don’t keep guns in your bed!
so when the novel series Artemis Fowl had a whole background for the character Butler involving him learning several types of martial arts, Cordon Bleu cooking, emergency medicine, how to navigate information technology, and also being a highly trained pilot, the author wasn't over exaggerating
As a nanny in the Bay Area, this video makes me wish we had proper training here. Families here rely mostly on experience and references than a child development degree, which does suffice, however, proper training would make it feel even more so as a profession the world takes seriously. I know its a proper profession but training would solidify a sense of professionalism via a degree.
Then people would be paying around 10k+ a year for 4 years for a job that would pay 37k a year on average. I'm sure there's some type of training for being a nanny in the U.S., but problem is, when you get a lot of people with degrees in a field, people start to expect* new hires to have a degree. So then, what do you get? Lower paying jobs with higher requirements, and a lot of loans. In the end of the day anyway, I'd bet that people would much rather hire family friends or those who were recommended as nannies over some stranger with training.
@@AAAAAAAA23909 stranger with training is getting paid and would do a whole lot better at protecting the infant of a high profile individual. I'm assuming the higher you go the less people trust their own families.
Be the person to start the company!!! You might be surprised, maybe it could be very successful! Honestly even some mothers might find certain classes useful.
i am so astonished to watch this video as they are so trained girl to protect the children. They are so dexterous about their work i.e sewing,defence,coocking & caring the children. They are earning so much in comparison of other professional.
These classes should be mandatory for everyone when they start college instead of those bs gym classes. How to cook, defend yourself, and care for a child (if you want to have a kid). Also swimming and cpr should be part of it too
@@WildVee gym is a bs course that teaches students nothing it's mandatory because its a bandaid for the obesity problem in the states but nevertheless it hasn't decreased rates of eating disorders or obesity so its useless. And in the states there is no unified curriculum thus some people will learn swimming and cpr other won't so this person's probably from the states and that why their complaing about gym and cpr.
@@WildVee I did swimming at school but only did CPR with a youth group. I agree with OP, gym is fine but it's not that useful. Make kids do one extra sport class after school a week and sub this in.
Someone: * breaks in the house during night time The nanny who graduated from this school: Im not locked in here with you, you're locked in here with me
"Sorry I'm late, I had defense classes, masseuse lessons and then a specialist skid driving class."
"Oh.....What are you studying?"
"Childcare."
Bruuuh. Sounds like what a kidnapper would say💀
Pfttt
"Name?"
"Pennyworth. Alfreda Penyworth."
"Will this make a better nanny?"
*cold sweat "Nanny?"
You forgot deep sea diving
Amazing. They're like nurses, police officers, chefs, and teachers wrapped in one profession. So impressive.
Jack of all trades, master of none.
@@jessh5661 “Jack of all trades, master of none” is often used as some sort of insult, but the full statement is “Jack of all trades, master of none, though oftentimes better than master of one.” Showing that being mostly good at many things is better than being great at one thing and terrible at everything else.
@@TheAlison941 Thanks for that. I never knew there was more to the saying.
@@TheAlison941 what a good defense
Yeah I know! I call mine mum.
The special forces of nannies. So badass. A personal chef, bodyguard, nurturer, hospitality, sewing & other legitimate trades etc. Glad their paid well.
@K4nzler Same. This nannies could get beat up by an average 14y/o
@@aleksanderzalar1195 what if they aren't being serious because it's an interview? everyone could get shy when a camera is pointing at them.
When you look at 1:15, it looks like they aren't actually being serious at all. they can even drift a car, that one is an another kind of feat.
Yeah, but come on. Do you really think they'll stop a grown man...?
@@carstenhansen5757 yeah they can, sometimes good skills is all it takes, even teenage girls have been able to defeat grownman with some selfdefence or sports skill.
@@diopets depends how much the aggressor is committed
I want a Netflix series about a nanny like this, protecting probably a rich kid who is prone to kidnapping or just a normal kid who is unaware of what a Black Widow nanny they have.
Someone needs to write this
see "man on fire" haha
The Transporter, literally. Also Transporter 2, oh and Transporter 3
nah fr
The first thing I thought after she described the nannies as Mary Poppins with a little bit of James Bond was "tell me you wouldn't watch that series".
imagine thinking a nanny is an easy mugging target then she starts drifting the car, slams into you, gets out the car and lifts you up by the neck with one hand lmao
A action flick like Breaking In but instead of a mom is a nanny who can drift a car and will make the life of the kidnappers a nightmare.
That sounds like the preview of the next Terminator movie!
Doom guy but make it a nanny
“Give me the child if you vant to live” -Adrea Schwarzenegger
I kinda got a picture of Roberta from Black Lagoon in my head now xD
They weren’t kidding about the Mary Poppins with a bit of James Bond line.
Ikr
Iôiikkkk8kiiiiii
Aka Vin Diesel in the Pacifier
“The names Poppins, Mary Poppins.”
Yeah they even come with their own L8A52
Kidnapper: sees the "N" logo on the nanny's chest*
Also kidnapper: "Apologies, have a nice day."
are they nannies for some mafia or some shit
@@OHOE1 No they're nannies for royals,nobles,rich business people and actors
The N word pass
@@enveloreal I thought we left these jokes in 2018. It's getting cringe now
This cracked me up! 😂
The last young lady interviewed is exactly what every parent wants in a nanny! A person who is passionate and excited about the way their child sees the world! Well done young lady!
Yes
That girl knew this was a job interview lol and she nailed it
@@ZannePeace42 indeed she did!
Yeah she knows it don't worry :)
I thought what every woman wants in a nanny is someone who will not sleep with her husband.
Not only are they getting incredibly useful skills for their lives, this honestly seems like such a great environment to be in too.
Potentially super toxic and restrictive, but also interesting.
:) not all limits are bad - without limits we would have people driving on the left and crushing with others
@@annad.7519 that's funny cause in England you drive on the left side :D
@@hanmira xD
@Sergeant you usually only train to fight in situations where escape is not an option. Even then you learn not to defeat but to distract so you can run away. I hardly think they teach them to start a fight when fleeing is an option.
This is the most British thing I've ever seen.
yup
🤣🤣
It’s the most British thing I’ve ever seen too, and I’m British!
Same and I live IN Britain
oh come here in england and watch yourself, everything is really british
This, right up there with the Butler Academy, is probably the most British thing I've ever seen.
I want a Kingsmen movie but just with these Nannies
and the butlers, with rivalry between the schools, where a super butler and super nanny have to work together to save a baby from being kidnapped
You have got to write a script and send it out. I’d watch it,
@@treyi1794 I'm loving the story development. Are the parents aware or unaware that their child is missing and were they responsible for the child or is the child just the child of a high profile person or someone both individuals care about that maybe works at bopth schools?
@@shoca3427 the kid is the child of two superheroes-- must be found before the parents return - the reputations of both the schools are at stake here
From rivals to best friends to comrades trying to save the child and their family honor - what a film. Or even a series!
Not gonna lie- as someone who is still undecided on a profession for the future, being a nanny (with good pay) suddenly doesn't sound so bad...
Yes that's what i thought 🤣 i will be rich
As someone who lives with a nanny, you either love helping kids or hate them because my sister is one and I can't stand children. Like literally I have panic attacks from a past event
You have to be good with kids though. But I think they teach child psychology too there
If you can afford the tuition.
@Flying Llama Us in America are paying 60k-80k per year on university 😭
imagine being a kid and your parents hire a nanny who's basically as capable as black widow
that would be amazing
hell yea
@@DD-lc8ei Ah I didn't know a "nanny" could also be dudes if that's what you're saying but never seen a male Nanny and that's what I call my grandmother sometimes since I was little so I was used to thinking Nanny's we're typically women
@@DD-lc8ei I'm not sure anyone would really be upset however that a Nanny Profession is specifically for women, it's not like there aren't professions dominated or specific for men like being a male heavy weight boxer or WWE fighter or construction worker or worker in a harsher and more strength requiring environment.
seems like it's not a real issue
I love how they have all kinds of classes from embroidery to cooking, then there is the drifting class
Maybe the aren't just trained to drift but also for advanced driving and evasion. But i also get ur joke mate 😂😂
When you gotta Tokyo drift, you Tokyo drift
**Tokyo drift intensifies**
Ya know, thats how u get the fresh tofu
The most important
Some dude accidentally brushes past a baby:
Nanny: so u have chosen death
😂 thank you for laugh!
Banish him to the shadow realm 🤣😂
Nanny*
🤣🤣🤣
@@discoshark7767 this isn't a spelling bee
It’s good they are able to command such a high salary. Caretaking is serious work and people should pay appropriately for it.
Thing is, at 10 bucks an hour, for 24 hours a day, if you do that line of work for a 4 week period, you are already looking at 6720$. Even at just 8 bucks, 5376$. Now, let’s say you work for 8 hours / 6 days a week at 12 / 15 bucks an hour for 4 weeks, you still make a very decent 2304$ or 2880$ per month. Pretty sweet gig if one is into the line of work.
@@Arcaryon 2300 or 2880 is not a lot of money a month, especially for this kind of work. They earn a lot more apparently, more like 14000$ which seems insane. But 2800$ in the UK is not a lot of money…
@@dutchdaleyy I am not talking about the absolute elite here, but rather about the bottom potential of being a full time nanny. I should have specified, my bad.
It’s not a lot but it’s a very good amount.
And at the aforementioned 6720$, you are already looking at 80640$ a year.
Not amazing but for a line of work most people on the face of the planet do for free, that’s quite high already.
At 30$ an hour with a, let’s say, 10 hour/6days ( which would probably be quite low, considering they would most likely take care of the children for basically 24/7 minus school where they would still work as caretakers and prepare a lot of things etc. ) that’s I am not talking about the absolute elite here, but rather about the bottom potential of being a full time nanny. I should have specified, my bad.
It’s not a lot but it’s a very good amount.
And at the aforementioned 6720$, you are already looking at 80640$ a year.
Not amazing but for a line of work most people on the face of the planet do for free, that’s quite high already.
Now, let’s go with the aforementioned 14.000$.
A month with an average workload of 28 days has to pay 500$ a month. Which is a lot and yet, not a lot. Times 12 we end up at 16800$. Now, let’s go with 10 hour workdays; that’s “only” 50$ an hour. Compared to the average income in, say, the UK of workers, that is certainly a lot of money. The national annual average for employees over there was £38.600, which is currently 45.661,83 $ at _current_ exchange rates.
The US employee average was 79.422$ in 2020. The issue being of course that the cost of living is hard to compare making salary comparisons not as accurate as people may think but of course, the aforementioned highest amount is a very, very good income.
It’s not a high salary))) It’s nothing
@@anar9829 Get a job first kid
Kidnapper: "I'm going to take away that child off of her."
Nanny: *Grabs their arm
Kidnapper: "I want to apologize"
Can definitely happen
Nanny: Apologize this!
/proceeds to knock him
Nanny: sorry bro I'm trained to do this shit
69 likes 💀
The nanny just evaporates them from the universe
@@ZestyAqua tf
I never thought I wanted to become a nanny. Just the idea of being able to self defend myself and my/someone else's baby is awesome!
Same.
and cooking and even drive a car!
Yeah but if 2 or 3 big guys try to kidnap the child, they will laugh about the nanny in her dress and high heels and knock jer out.
@lia_berry 🍓 Yes it does.
Most women will get knocked out or killed by an average guy.
I can't believe you still fall for that feminist claptrap lol.
the way theese nannies are thought to fight is useless. An average 14 y/o could beat one up and kidnap a baby lmao
just imagine being a robber and decided to rob a house, then the nanny pulls a gun on you faster than the speed of light
They don't have guns lol
This is the UK not America!
Call an ambulance! But not for me or the kid
The icing on top would be training them for conceal carrying
Nanny defense protocol: force field activated neutralize the intruder
The fact that it cost $21k a year and they’re calling that expensive makes me want to cry. I’m at a State College in the US and it’s more than that for a normal degree
Genuine question, how do people ever pay that off?
@@gwenne2581 you either hope the field you're going into pays enough to pay it off over time, live with that debt for the rest of your life, or work with the government or a position that offers student loan forgiveness.
@@gwenne2581or your parents pay it off
@@gwenne2581 you die and pass it onto your family
@@gwenne2581 Join the military and get paid to attend school. I got to travel the world and live out my Star Trek fantasies in real life Naval warfare scenarios working in aviation. Setting a Naval Aviation Milestone which will probably never be broken. Partied everywhere in Asia and Australia. Financially semi-retired by 38. The problem is that regular jobs suck for me now.
Okay, now I need a dramatic action comedy movie on nannies uniting together to save a group of kidnapped kids!!!
Yeah imagined directed by Guy Ritchie
Or an animation!
That would be cool though
Have you seen "The Pacifier" great movie.
With these nannies, the kids would never get kidnapped in the first place lol
"So how's college?"
"I get to learn self-defense, wicked driving techniques, and how to cook and massage like a pro."
"What kind of school is that??"
"Nanny school"
Wa-CHA!!!!
KA POW!!
How... How did you make it sound so badass
Haha akwaaard
Marry Poppins School**
I'm very surprised by comments here. Nannies are some of the least appreciated and looked down upon of employees. Loving a child as if it was your own, investing your time, patience, care and knowledge into some one else's child has been my privilege for two decades. Norland Nannies are a status symbol, mostly employed by foreigners wanting to appear British. Majority of families are after warm, caring, patient nannies who share their values to help them bring up their children. Families live further away from one another and not everyone has the privilege of having their own parents able to help. We have First Aid Training, are DBS checked and have training on top of many other careers we initially trained for, bringing life experience into workplace. I spent 20 years in comfortable civilian clothing getting dirty in sandpits, muddy puddles and covered in food and paint, rolling down the hills and coming down the slides with children on my lap. Bringing up a little human being is a tremendous task! Nannies deserve way more pay and recognition than they are given credit for.
If you didn’t do it someone els would just saying…
@@PhilipJFry-tm9ve huh? did you reply to the wrong comment?
@@bagpaper6964 yup lol and wrong video 😂 idk why it posted here this was for a dragons den video lmao
@@PhilipJFry-tm9ve Did you happen to have videos queued up on RUclips?
I think there's a bug. Another video is playing but the comment section is for a different one.
@@tjslam26 something like that I had started typing my comment but as soon as I posted it, the next video was already auto playing which was this one
I think having classes like these for everyone in highschool would be great. Like, dedicate a year (maybe an additional year before they graduate or something) where everyone is taught how to be a decent homemaker, and take care of a kid (maybe including mandatory volunteering in daycares or elementary schools). It'd set people up a lot better off as young adults, and I think it'd work as a pretty decent birth control for a lot of folks (children can be rewarding, but I imagine having to clean up after all of their various fluids would be a nice reality check for a very young adult who hasn't completely thought it through, and for the ones that do still want kids at that age, those kids will have knowledgeable parents).
Naturally it wouldn't be as in depth, but a year of school dedicated to cooking, cleaning, sewing, understanding children, etc would do so many people so much good.
(And to really clarify, when I say everyone, I mean every single person, not just women)
Im with you that high school should teach basic childcare. Even if you never become a parent, children are a huge part of the comminitu
I like your idea. Make it a vocational class because really these skills can be applied across the board throughout any path in life & for both men and women. Your comment motivated my morning 💪 thank you
It was a thing some 30 years ago where i live but it is non existing practice today. Which is a shame. I think it would be a very useful thing to introduce back into the school program.
that would be a nightmare xd
@@alenamerklova9235 but eventually rewarding
this school also gives them good lessons in cooking, child psychology, self-defense, and also prepares them for if they want to be moms themselves. Overall, very well rounded. Also the sewing can come in handy when stitching someone up.
@Baby Barbie there are but mainly for teen moms. My grandma went to one and they taught cleaning, cooking. Sewing, and more.
@Baby Barbie yeah to teach them the whole nine yards of raising a kid, before they start popping them out. A lot of people (IMO) have kids before realizing how much work it is, and some regret it later.
@Baby Barbie well said. Sad so many men and women grow up without anyone teaching these essential things... hell most can't even cook for *themselves*
@@Global_Havoc18 Yeah when the child is young people think “Oh, this is easy, I should have more.” Without knowing that when the child grows up things’ll get harder, and harder. It’s pretty sad.
@Baby Barbie Yeah and teach more family planning as well, my country have popped birth rate because for them family planning is something like abortion and im like wtf all the time, many people are uneducated, this education is a necessity to learn
I'm just happy housework and childcare are finally being acknowledged as a profession and are being compensated well. Even if it's just this very niche group.
"Finally"
Uh-
@@bri5033 yeah lmao...since 1892
Mormon comment
You are lucky I spent 10 years of my life being forced to be other people's children's fathers and the last year I was doing it I had to beg my mother to pay half my rent so I could remain dry when it rained.
Agree!!!!
Disappointed because they didn’t show how to fly with an umbrella part of the training.
Wa ha ha ha 😹😹😹😂😂😅😅👍
that’s the secret part
🤣🤣
BAHHAHAHAHAH PLEASEE-
That's confidential
To be honest this is a fantastic concept! I love how much pride they have in being a nanny :)
I think if someone is willing to enroll in this school and put so much effort into becoming the best nanny they can be, then they’re already great before they even receive the education! The school naturally attracts those who genuinely love kids 😆 I can imagine it’d be easy to make friends with such a sweet group
Ah would be easy for me i get friendzoned all the time
@@dhruvavikas1632 with a demeanor like that, I can totally see why... 🤷🏻♀️
@@Asdfgqedfglo People like you would be the one to friend zone them
@@njay4399 😂😆😂
The comments! 😭
So... these nannies can drift a car? Damn, that's edgy!
I mean.......you'll be surprised when that'll come in handy.
@@30secondstomarsMBH escape some criminals trying to harm the child or something
@OhReoGre driving and drifting a car is different
In one day you got all these likes
Nanny gotta deliver the tofu
Someone that is highly trained to care and protect children has a high grade in my book.
Yes!
Give me 170k I will have an even higher grade in your book .
This honestly sounds like a dream come true for a person like me.
I absolutely adore children and I used to babysit for free, the longest “job” I had was staying at the parents place for 2 weeks, the mother was in the hospital and the father had college and work, there were 3 toddlers under the age of 4, I woke up early every morning to cook for the father and kids and throughout the day I cooked for every meal and made sure it was healthy.
I sowed some stuff, basically fixing holes in stuffed animals, clothes and blankets, it was a very lovely experience and the parents praised my work and I became the kids aunty, they thought I was they’re dad’s sister actually it was so sweet.
I also once babysat 12 kids most around 5 and under, there was 1 kid that was 9 and I did it alone, it was absolutely anxiety inducing and I was certain something was going to go wrong but I was lucky and I was about to keep everything going perfectly.
It’s something I put my everything into and I know if I heard of this college when I was a bit younger I would have tried to apply. I don’t want to be a mother due to being uninterested in dating or romance and if I have kids I’d like to be a stay at home mom so it’s just not in the cards for me but I still love children.
This seems like a very fulfilling occupation and an honorable one too.
GO FOR IT
Yup! Go for it.
Come live with us in Puerto Rico ! We need help with our three boys, Michael 5, Marcello 4, and Matteo 3. Its a beautiful island and we will include a room and board, salary, medical insurance and car !
I didn't realize there was a school for this. How cool! There's even a school for butlers. Imagine graduating in both. You'll be like the most capable and competent person ever.
Alfred Pennyworth
Imagine being RAISED by someone who graduated from butler and nanny school xD
@@inspiteofshame the kid would be a force to be reckoned with
@@inspiteofshame Bruce Wayne?
A competent servant.
*These nannies are so advanced* that they babysit parents.
What if our parents were our babysitters all along and they switch between the two all the time?
@@le9038 nani
@@neighborhood_penguin4873 omaiwa...
@@neighborhood_penguin4873 nanny?
@@omsincoconut it's a meme
(And anime I think)
They basically learn everything from every day life, but cooler: cooking and sewing but pro way, driving but action movie style, protecting the kid but martial art style, soothing but made full on massage... the thing, is, the kids they take care of will probably think this is perfectly normal. They are kids with all the good stats from the start lol
Yes. ScarJo should redo that babysitting movie she did as Black Widow. Also I believe Mary Poppins had her own James Bond skills. That would have been the real MP II
Lies again? Phil Maid
I love how Business Insider curates such unique and informative content.
This was a surprising find...love how these nannies are so well trained. Freja has an excellent outlook. Such a joy taking care of babies and kids.
This is the most British thing ever
LoL probably
170,000 British pounds a year.
I literally said out loud "this is the most British thing I've ever seen"
@@abovewater99 never said it didn’t make bank lol
@Dark Night Relaxation no I didn’t mean having a nanny like this was only British I meant a school like this seems so posh
This could easily be turned into a series.
It kinda is lol
I would watch that show 😂
these guys can make any boring thing into a edge of your seat blockbuster. Have you guys ever watched kids? THis is exactly that... lol wake up, this is just like glamourizing it. its just babysitting
There actually is. It was called British most posh nannies or something like that
There is, there was one made about 20 years ago, and a more recent one.
"Seeing a child exploring, being curious, wanting to learn, wanting to grow, that just so incredible."
Aww, that's someone who loves children.
If there parents can pay.
@@viktoriak4332 but she needs to earn back the fees plus it's really hard work she deserves to be compensated for
That's what she wants to see but not every child is like that.
@@hanniesung3595 yeah but the children with parents who can pay would most likely already be getting such enrichment. There's nothing wrong with them earning money, but they're not helping children, they're just working with clients
The sad thing is that this is an upper level thing, exclusive.
All people working with children, having children, should have these skills!
Physicians have a total of around 12 years (and specialists more) post secondary school, including residency... & they are responsible for other's lives.
Nannies and parents are responsible for lives, but usually have abysmally poor training.
Being a parent is a job & most people have little training.
I get what you're saying, and I agree. But physicians have greater responsibilities and greater risks. Whether it's a surgeon or medical doctor, they physically manipulate our bodies for healing. Nannies are almost like first responders compared to physicians. Yes, I hope they have incredible training, but I'd hope the doctor even more so has greater training.
Not trying to argue or troll, and I totally agree that society should place much more emphasis on parenting and nannying.
@@queueeeee9000 my point was not the either/or you seem to be saying.
I am not questioning that physicians need that amount of training. I completely support it and actually think some physicians need more training. I worked in critical care for over a decade.
Suggesting that ALL children have support and safety, as those who have these higher trained nannies, is NOT a suggestion that physicians have less.
To translate what I was saying in that manner is representative of a cognitive distortion (either/or, black/white) as well as scarcity mindset. It is limited thinking.
I wouldn't personally correlate nannies to first responders...although I can see why some people would.
Parents, and other caregivers, have a powerful impact on the foundation of a person. They form the foundation, the subconscious programming, and the whole trajectory of a person's life.
In studying trauma, and it's impact on health consequences...the ACE's study is a great place to start...I saw that what is wholly missing in preventative care, is better foundations for children. From a neuroscience perspective, this starts prior to birth. If you understand epigenetics, trauma (as per Dr Gabor Mate), addiction, risky behaviors, self sabotaging health choices, and can tie it into the complexity of neural networks...then you'll get it.
Yes, by all means, physicians (and supporting staff) need tons of education and training....however, this doesn't mean that parents and nannies don't.
Physicians need much training AND parents and caregivers do also. Of course, it's different training. However, if all parents and caregivers had the appropriate training, that supported optimal brain, body, and all, to flourish and be safe....we'd have WAY less need for as many physicians!
A huge proportion of disease, accidents, domestic violence, and on and on...originate from improper, ill-informed, damaging, parental/caregiver influence. Of course those parents learned much of that from their caregivers, parents too. In my work towards a PhD in neuroscience, breaking those cycles is at the forefront of all I do.
It was when I worked critical care, I started seeing the connection.
While I know you weren't trying to "troll", you also appear not to know a lot in this realm, the deep, multifaceted complexities that impact human development and health.
@@Alphacentauri819- I wasn't implying that I know the inner workings and multifaceted complexities of human development. I'm sorry if you felt like I was challenging your knowledge on the subject.
I was merely commenting on your comment regarding physician training. You brought up the length of time physicians require for schooling and training. You're implying they are comparable on some level. I'm merely pointing out the differences. I'm not implying nannies don't need any.
I'm questioning your comparison. That's all, mate:)
@@queueeeee9000 in my comparison...it wasn't to take away from physicians though. It was to add to the areas (without taking anything from anyone else) where it is sorely needed.
The comparison was because there is a recognition that physicians need so much training and education, which is absolutely valid...and simultaneously a huge blindness to where more collective, foundational, societal, support is needed.
The comparison wasn't intended the way it was taken...that's all :)
It was basically a call to wake up...that we can value some areas that matter...let's value and provide support for other powerful areas that matter to general human well-being too 😊
Yes, I wish this training would be available for everyone and that schools would teach real life skills.
When they finish the course, do they give them their umbrella to fly away or is that in a separate course?
Nop. That skills are Poppins by themselves 😉😉
@@kmh4076 🤣
Lol
@Usuario 10 For that price, it better not only come with the umbrella, but the bottomless carpet bag as well! XD
Angel wings...
I'd pay extra for a nanny that has training in:
- self defense
- safe driving (defensive)
- First aid level 2
- cooking healthy foods
- Early childhood teaching (I.e. montesorri)
How about: safe driving (offensive)?
Yeah, only if you can afford to pay them extra 200k$ not including bonuses and insurance.
What means extra? How many kids? When could I start?
Where can I send my application?
- pickpocket level 2
- longbow level 3
- sneak level 2
And they have to come with at least a backpack level 4 and dragonscale armor
Nanny Qualifications:
-Cooking
-Cleaning
-*SICK DRIFTS*
xD
All the nannies I ever knew would tell you in a very polite way to get lost if you wanted them to cook or clean. The Nanny is not a maid or a cook.
I had a Norland nanny and she was and is still the most talented driver I know
@@corriedebeer799
but if its combined - the more you pay.
otherwise, you would have to hire 3 or more people which costs more.
although - what if they are sick sometimes? then you lose all professions at once ^^
@@Plasmabeisser The ones I knew where highly specialized childcare professionals that would be highly offended if you asked them to do the hoovering.
@@corriedebeer799 but why not? that's why these maids get paid such a high salary
Honestly this seems like a great life skill course in general. I wish this was available worldwide
Why did I choose a path in bio sciences when I could have been a SUPER NANNY 😭😭😭
Bio sciences is so cool
Lol
Comment flex acknowledged
@@justinmebes476 wow….really!?…thanks :D
If it is any solace... super nannies are rather common. They are generally called mom's. That is how the world got this far.
lowkey wanna take these classes just to look after myself tbh
Lmao right ?
Yes yes yes
Same
LMAO JUST WHAT I WAS THINKING-
same 💀
Ngl, as an American, seeing a 20k+ per year fee actually didn’t sound that bad considering places like Stanford, Yale, and MIT
Stanford is literally free if you make the cut
@@amill1387 all those schools are free if you're a charity case. Also those schools are terrible.
@Akki Kishore that’s why I said if you make the cut, and no many middle class students who come from families that make $100,000 can get in for free or nearly free
@@yaphace terrible? Going to an Ivy League is a badge that companies want to hire…
@@amill1387 a lot of people lie in the gap where their parents make enough to exclude them from financial aid, but are also refusing to contribute. That leaves them unable to get needs based scholarships to hugely expensive places like that.
This honestly seems like a great school and career. You're paying a lot less than some schools in the US, but you become far better at practical skills and you likely end up with a higherpaying job too
Kidnapper: You're just a butler and a nanny. What can you do? Give me the kid.
*Last words*
Lol 😆🤣
@@chinglesscheddar no , last words for the kidnapper
Mr Bond, you must protect the prince of maldovia with your life.
But he's just a baby
Exactly
haha! Amazing
That's when I am originally from Moldavia and reading this comment ))).
@@Avdarmaly my moms from moldova too :)
Moldova* not Maldo or Molda
2 Elon Musk has positioned himself as a fighter for the environment, but invests billions of dollars in maintaining and mining bitcoin. Although bitcoin mining takes 121.36 terawatt hours (terawatt hours) per year (which is more than the annual energy consumption of some countries), as well as the release of a huge amount of thermal energy when operating equipment for mining bitcoin and for generating electricity (for example, Wa Parish power plant, the largest coal-fired power plant in the United States, generates 4 thousand megawatt hours, that is, it needs 10 years of operation to provide an annual consumption for the total mining of bitcoin), which does not contribute to the fight against global warming. And where is the statement of the most famous environmentalists "How dare you".
But it is interesting that in the US-controlled states and politicians who have carried out coups d'etat in their countries, or illegally dismissed presidents by changing power, each of them has open bitcoin wallets. And most of these revolutionaries - current governments and officials, have or have had connections with the US State Department and charitable foundations and foundations that provide financial support to countries, democracy and journalism (such as the Soros Foundation, the National Endowment for Democracy) and it is not in vain that Soros invests money in bitcoin, because it is almost impossible to track it.
Now imagine billions of US taxpayers' dollars with the help of bitcoin transfers go to incomprehensible events and to the pockets of government representatives and gangs in countries that support racism, Nazism, there is no tolerance for representatives of different sexual orientations, and instead of introducing democratic norms, this money goes to corruption ...
Billions of US taxpayers' dollars go into the pockets of so-called patriots in such countries as: Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Armenia, Tajikistan, Iran, Iraq, Czech Republic, Poland, Moldova, Lithuania, Latvia.
And bitcoin ideally performs these functions, because it is almost impossible to track it, but do not forget that it carries another function - the function of a banal fraud (casino), because there are people who, on exchange rate fluctuations, receive excess profits (for example, one statement of support for bitcoin Elon Musk raised it is in price, and later, when he said that he didn’t support him that much, bitcoin dropped. Strangely enough, he received these billions by selling bitcoin at the peak of his growth, maybe he plays bitcoin roulette and on the trust of his fans, to make a profit)
Kid: “but I’m not tired! I don’t wanna go to bed!”
Nanny gets into a Kung fu stance: “I said it’s time to go night night…”
They can fight off criminals but that is nothing compared to children dancing on your nerves!
🤣
**Mortal Kombat theme plays**
i thought the nanny just need to pinch the kids shoulder and the kids doze off...
LMFAO
This is wonderful. Being proud of your profession and building unique skills is something we desperately lack in the United States.
Good to know that house chores and babycare are being acknowledge as a profession. Our mothers serves our family and that too without any respects and a single penny; it used to call as their "DUTY"
it is also the fathers' "DUTY"
Well said ❤️
Idk what you mean by "finally", being a nanny has always been a profession in Britain and a good paying one too
@@inconspicuoussalad7730 no I am not taking about 'nanny's ,all I am saying that childcare and houseworks are so underrated ..
@@akarinakamura802 hell yess
I'VE NEVER BEEN MORE JEALOUS IN MY ENTIRE LIFE, THE SKILLS THEIR LEARNING IN COLLEGE THEY CAN USE IN REAL AND IN THEIR PERSONAL LIFE WHAT
exactly! I never understood how to use my pram!😲🤔😬
@@boromirofmiddleearth557 🤣
Check into your own social circle and see who would like to share their skills with you.
This is such a real comment LOL I thought about this too like these things are skills the can apply to their own lives too, it’s great
😂😂 it's good because they're so few in numbers . They're not in 100s or 1000s. They're in a specific program which doesn't has that much demand. A specific course for a need of specific kind of people.
This is basically learning how to live. They teach you how to cook, how to defend yourself, some first aid, how to drive, and how to solve some of the small things life throws at you like, sewing a button back on.
@@shh-bb2wj to drift you must first drive
@@00sra *turn attack*
Yeah, they teach you how to do all this... but better.
So everything they don’t teach you in school?
Why don't they teach this at school
This seems so much fun honestly and the place so lively and the people seem so sweet and friendly.
Don't be fooled. I am sure there are some serious mean girls, drama, and competitiveness.
This wasn’t enough; I must know more. We need a full blown documentary. I am so intrigued.
I saw a full documentary about this a few years ago. I can't remember the name, but it definitely exists so might be worth a Google Search
@@caitlinbrown7597 Thank you - I’ll have a look soon
@@humansponge5130 Once you find it can you please share the link in the replies?
Me too.
@@maddietillem6778 and meeee
"Nanny, can I go outside please?"
No Johnny, not now.
*"Proceeds to run outside"*
*Obliterates Johnny*
LMFAO
“see Mathew? This is why Johnny is a bad influence”
LOL
*Breaks Johnny's legs and arms so he never defies her ever again*
@@alexterieur8813 i literally screamed when i saw ur comment
I would love to see a film like this. Badass Nannies.
Or an Netflix series
This is actually a brilliant idea! I would LOVE to see a movie like this!!!!
Yes!
Just thought the same thing! 😂 “The King’s Nannies”
Came too early. Must wait some time to see if someone has come with some recommendations
Ouh this is amazing, wonderful and incredible. Superwoman nanny. Love to see this job being acknowledged and well paid. This is real dedication
now imagine them when they have kids of their own, would 1000% tell them that I'm a spy
There was a cartoon I watched where the nanny turned out to be a spy. I cannot remember the name of the cartoon.
@@CC-si3cr I thinks that’s the pacifier
@@missmosie7565 not a cartoon.
@@missmosie7565 @Space Bar I REMEMBERED IT!!! I remembered the cartoon!!! Duck Tales 2017! Mrs. Beakley was a former spy. I don't know why you thought it was the live-action movie "The Pacifier". 1) That is not a cartoon. 2) Vin Diesel's character was a Navy SEAL not a spy.
I'd like to watch an anime about this 😂
As long as it doesn’t turn out like promised Neverland
That would be epic!
@@kaitlynavitia1359 we share the same brain lmao
My first thought after reading this was promised neverland 💀
YESS! I’d like to see that in a slice of life sort of thing
Me: Now why would anyone want to be in this professio-
*sees salary
Me: Ah understandable
I mean a lot of people work with small children and babies even without those levels of salary
@@idek7438 I come from a wealthy family. Using bodyguards and stay at home nannies is more common that you think. Im 17 y old and since i remember i have had my
Driver/bodyguard . I think this is preposterous but alot of wealthy kids have people protecting them.
@ Eph Vc can I come visit and stay w you? Lol
@@ephvc9663 Can i come visit and stay w you? too? Lol
@@ephvc9663 can I be your bodyguard then? I'll even protect you from the toxicity of social media
My nanna (bio) was a norland nanny. She looked after a dukes children and regularly tells me about how she would take them to Buckingham palace for their ballet lessons with the princes.
That’s so cool, which duke and princess was it.
I want a movie about one of these ladies. Like "The Pacifier" meets "James Bond" or something
💰 here take my money
bro i was thinking the same we need a movie and not a goddamn mary poppins reboot
It reminds me of Jack Chan's movie Robin B Hood though it is not talking about nannies
Like Kingsman movies except it will be with nanny-spies
Yes!
I don't know if I'd love or hate being rich. On the one hand, I'd have enough money to hire a literal bodyguard for my children. On the other hand, I'd have enough money to NEED a literal bodyguard for my children
Same, i wanna be poor
I mean you could be poor/middle class and still a lot of people could kidnap your child for sex-trafficking him/her, but you won’t be able to afford a ninja nanny to protect them. If you are rich you can afford safety, sure you could be a more juicy target for extortion, but with your money you can pay top notch technology to keep your house safe, the ninja nannies, a bodyguard, private security, and all of that stuff is a deterrent to people trying to kidnap your children for sex trafficking (what i mean is taht they’d rather kidnap a poor kid whose parents wont be able to do anything.
Plus at the end of the day you can always pay the ransom if you need to. And in case you didn’t know, they also kidnap non-rich kids for ransom for way less money than you imagine (about 20 years ago a middle class little girl was kidnap in my country and the kidnappers asked for 10k USD, they paid it and got her back, but omg i don’t understand how could anyone do that for just 10k! Im sure this kind of kidnaps are extremely rare tho, i haven’t heard of anything similar happening ever again, at least here)
You dont “need” to actually. If you go out with super sparkly jewelry then you probably will need bodyguards but if you are just a rich guy with normal lifestyle and you are not that famous then no need to worry
Usually only if you‘re actually LIVING the rich lifestyle. If you have much money, but live and look like a normal dude then most people won‘t even know that you have money.
(Of course that only works if you didn‘t get your money from something that gave you celebrity status)
@@anthonyrobert1376 It also depends on how crime is in your country, and how much criminals have to fear apprehension.
If your in a bad neighborhood in Chicago, hustlers and kidnappers can tell your class by how your hand moves when you sneeze and tell how experienced you are with any of the deterrents available to the area are by your voice even if you train not to use a accent. As a pretty general rule if your in a area with nannies, no matter your country, criminals don't even have to fear the police
"The name's Poppins. Mary Poppins."
*BOND THEME INTENSIFIES*
Bruh
Bruh (2)
Bruh (3)
Bruh (4)
Bruh (5)
Basically, after graduating you'll have a variety of high level skills which means you can pretty much work in many different fields aside from being a nanny.
even if there skills went transferable there trained to work for a very specific high paying clientell. why be a teacher when dummy billionare no5 will pay u 50k to pick their kid up from school.
Doesn't the uniform advertise that the nanny is looking after a kid whose parents are able to pay $170,000/year? I'd prefer a plainclothes Norland.
Yeah I'm afraid it may atract robbers
Most robbers are just opportunistic. If their uniform was normalized and known by most people as elite nannies, it already serves as a deterrent for most robbers. My logic to that is similar to locks, Ever heard of a saying "A lock only keeps honest people out"?. It's true, any person whose determined and ready to go to prison is gonna rob someone's belongings using whatever means necessary however since most robbers are just opportunistic a decent looking lock is able to deter them. Except that these nannies are really capable in protecting what they need to protect.
I'm sure they don't wear these uniforms when they go out to play with the kid in the mud. It's more of a status statement when you work for a wealthy family. I can imagine that if I was invited to a royal's house, it would be helpful to know this lady is a nanny, so I don't have to bow to her.
I'm just wondering who designed the uniform.....and who decided on the colour
@@2EKgn16 probably the superiors of the school.
Imagine rolling up that damn sushi while making the baby burp and kicking the ass of a robber on the living room.
and your hands still smelling of poop and talcom powder from changing diapers even after you washed them 10 times
I love that they learn sushi. When my son was small we lived in a coop house with a Korean student. She made sushi and my little son would sit with her just fascinated by the bright and colorful fingerfoods. She was so happy that he loved her cooking that she made him a sushi tower before leaving at the end of term. Sushi can be a nearly perfect toddler snack. My son is now 26 and still loves sushi ♡
It’s called sushi in Japan and Kimbap in Korea, though similar yet different
Your son sounds lovely. Is he single? I come from Japan where they serve actual sushi. What he learned was kimbap, the Korean one, as the one who commented above mentioned. Equating sushi to kimbap is like calling Sheppard's pie a steak and mash potatoes 🤣
What a wholesome...
@@jadejaguar69 he is single, lol. Hed be happy to learn more, I'm sure. Lol.
@@jadejaguar69 what a weird question Lol
I was about to comment that one of my sisters' friends went to train as a norland nanny, then realised she's in the video 😂
Nanny: I can do anything.
Baby: starts crying.
Nanny: this was not in our training.
Edit: hey i am still here
*JIUJITSU THE BABY*
@@Belphegor616 baby can't cry if baby dead
@@NAME-yg8sl i-
@@NAME-yg8sl true
@@NAME-yg8sl preach brother, I think I should do that to the boy in my basement
I really love the idea of this being a YA book series. About an academy for female bodyguards.
Slightly like vampire academy
ooh then for you I'd recommend the Gallagher Girls Series. it's about a prep school that looks like a normal school to everyone but those who are at it. it's where future female FBI agents get trained and learn things for the job, such as several languages, disguises, hacking, and of course combat. I think you'd like it!
@@aomnomnom never heard of it, but checking it out now. There is a steampunk (YA) series that is similar (kinda). Finishing School by Gail Carriger. Volume 1 is Etiquette and Espionage.
@@janetdw I love both the Gallagher Girls and Finishing School series! They seriously need more recognition!
Thanks for all the replies and this comment, too! I'd love to check these out someday!
You can only imagine the care they will give to their own child, they literaly studied to become a mother.
Being a nanny is different from being a mother
Just to say they have male students, although they don't appear in this video.
@@jadejaguar69 they're talking about how they care for children. And to a certain extent, that's what a mother does for the child's first years
They might need to hire a nanny.😁😁😁
Do nannies have time for their own kids???
Professional Mary Poppinses 👍
Love Britain’s ability make top level educational processes, now in nursery.
"They can make up to 170,000 a year"
*me: "I'll join!🙋🏼♀️"*
"However it's more expensive that Oxford or Cambridge college. Oh and you can't buy fast food either"
*me: " haha, nope"🚪🚶🏼♀️*
Wow. Oxford and Cambridge, but not all of us have the brain power for Ox and Cam, either or the intellectual interest to go the distance. Education requires passion or commitment.
That's only while in uniform. Once they take it off for the day they're free to make a burger or coffee run.
You forgot the part with the takeaway coffee... like.. what?
It's actually cheaper than a lot of schools in the US
and i cant sew
It's like Black Widow training facility, but for nannies. Now that would be a great movie! A nanny that has the child stolen, but goes into 'TAKEN' mode to get the child back. Lol
I imagine itd be a boring movie...as the kidnapping would have been a failure due to these epic women
The TV show Black Lagoon Seasons 2 and 3 already have a story line about this exact premise. Although it's technically an elite maid, not nanny. It's on Hulu US and Netflix UK.
@@Inciliusnebulifer It would be boring and a bad idea, but sadly good enough of a plot for Netflix to fund it. Lol
It might be a good video game plot at any rate.
But if the child was taken, the nanny already failed her mission
If they would just teach a fraction of this in US public schools, we would be so much better as a society. Cook, clean, sew and defend yourself.
📈 🚀
U dont learn sewing, cooking, cleaning and defense in public schools? Why
I learned cooking and sewing in middle school 12-13 years old. But not cleaning or defense lol
Your society is falling, just accept that.
@@cupofjoen yeah, the US is fucked. Patriarcy and billionaires have ruined it. I support life skills being taught in school. Not just government propaganda
0:01 I get it but none of these first three things really have anything to do with compassion and everyday child rearing. Being a nanny is about experience, but there is also a certain quality that can't be taught. Kindness, compassion, and a true love and joy for children
What do you do for a living?
Nannies: " *Sitting....Baby Sitting* "
We had all the same training at the English Nanny and Governess School in Ohio. I had 12 wonderful years in this profession then married and have my own wonderful family.
wholesome comment
@@bonelessmice6828 yas 👏🏽
🙇🏻♀️🕊🙏🏽🎉❤️
You must be the world's best mother
Wow! How much did you make?
"child-friendly sushi" so have the japanese kids been fed dangerous adult sushis all along
I feel like this is "what kids like to eat sushi" cos I don't think kiddos are ready for stuff like sea urchin lmao
@@TheNamesDitto rich kids, or rich parents who want their kids to eat sushi.
I think it's because you have to be careful with kids and potential allergens like shellfish, depending on how young you're making it for.
Without raw fish thats what they ment
@@definitelynotalizard just googled, you're right XD
All this training is wonderful. I fully commend it.
However, I will say that the most important quality of a nanny is her ability to LOVE your children and a well balanced mindset.
My nanny was our house hold servant who cooked and cleaned as well as keep an eye on me, especially when my Mum was working. She was not trained to be a nanny. but she loved me and all her actions in terms of guiding and disciplining me were guided by that LOVE.
So, she never allowed me to be a brat because that would be bad for me when I went to school and as an adult. But she gave me the time and space to be the child I was with my own unique personality.
I learnt about how to do a good job from her. This was 55 years ago. So I learn't to wash clothes by hand, clean a fish, bake a cake, fry an egg, wash vegetables, sweep the floor, make bread, sew quilts etc etc to a high standard. No forcing required. It was play and when I had enough playing with water (and there's a lot of water play when you wash clothes by hand or wash vegetables or play with a broom), then that was that. But somehow, in the process of this play, I learnt that whatever I did had to be done well. I learnt many of my values from her and they have served me well all my life.
In case you are wondering, yeah, my relationship with my mother was not as close as it could be but I'm not sure if it ever could have been. My mother was not neglectful or anything. But she was simply not as present because of her particular personality and issues. I would be a different person without my Nanny. I loved her. I still miss her.
I want this to be a Netflix show. I grew up learning all of these various skills from my over protective dad who decided teaching his 4 year old son things that marines learn was a crucial part to growing up. 🤦 With a little extra maternal knowledge added by my mom, like sewing, cooking, cleaning, and humility through ones own failure. I've always thought people with excessive sets of skills like these really excel in childcare as long as the person has a love for children to understand their basic needs as well as being able to handle practically anything under the sun.
Yes, really good childcare requires a serious and varied skill set.
Netflix version will teach them how to groom children.
Your dad sounds like a character. Humility during success is also an admirable quality to instill.
I would love this as a show as well, it would be interesting to see.
Ikr if this would be a Netflix show it sounds like it would be my comfort series 😫✨
Honestly… if the baby is a target. And your that rich…hire a security team as well as a nanny
The people who hire them do.
They usually hire like 2 nannies, 1 driver, 1 bodyguard for 1 child
@@yoon9521 nah they have a fleet
If your baby is a target, I would bet you have more than one layer of protection.
Not like they can handle a temper tantrum duh
The Kingsman movies should make a Nanny spinoff
Yes!!
That movie is the best advertisement for this school they didn't even need to pay for.
Yes 😂😂
“Kingsman the nasty nannies”
Yes as a branch bussiness lol
This is absolutely insane.
Imagine training to become a super soldier nanny.
Friend: Hey hows the baby sitting job?
Me: Oh its like I'm in a John Wick movie.
Edit: wow first 2k likes i'v ever gotton
He's Squidward
He's Squidward
You're Squidward
I'M SQUIDWARD!
Are there any more "SQUIDWARDS" I should know about??
@@hobisdimples94 your moms squidward
Lmaooooo
Making the nanny wear that identifiable uniform is an extremely bad idea because it may draw unwanted attention. That uniform becomes a walking billboard to identify wealthy families (i.e. kidnapping opportunities). If these nannies worked for me, I’d ask that they wear unassuming clothing while out with the children for safety.
norland: undercover
Thinking more than likely if the family is able to afford the nanny then the child might also have it's own security team or bodyguard. At least that's what I would do as the parent. I'm not putting all my trust in just the nanny to protect my children.
I think the uniform helps to keep the baddies away. Yes it does tell you the kid has rich parents, but it also tells you the wearer is capable of breaking your neck!
@@yujuti8416 I agree with Bridgette. At least hire someone who can carry a firearm, if the families truly concerned with kidnapping/ransom. This driver training is basically what the secret service get in the states
@@yujuti8416 yes but these high profile families also attract high profile kidnappers... who will have a similar skillset to the nanny, more than likely, and can overpower her. these nannies are not actual unbeatable superheroes.. just more trained for self-defence than the average person.
I'm american, no kids and yet I find this to be very informative and necessary for any parent or parent to be, or even for babysitting. "It's a dangerous world.."
A glock under the pillow works just as well
I would think that the children of some of these high profile families do in fact come with a high kidnap risk for ransom.
@@jarjarbinks4243 keep a gun under your pillow and your toddler will find that quicker than anything I swear. Want your kids alive…don’t keep guns in your bed!
Of course, the parents dont pay for the nanny only. I'm sure the babies have a LOT of bodyguards at all time
yes exactly! I really could have used the cooking and laundry classes!
This school just seems like such a calm place to build a fulfilling profession.
I wish domestic skills were more appreciated.
so when the novel series Artemis Fowl had a whole background for the character Butler involving him learning several types of martial arts, Cordon Bleu cooking, emergency medicine, how to navigate information technology, and also being a highly trained pilot, the author wasn't over exaggerating
i'd say he wasn't exagerating at all
Haha right
I'm guessing there's one out there taking care of some gangster's children and getting paid well over the $170k.
More
And she have a turret on top of the car and train to chased the kidnapers not how to get away
...
This should be a movie
As a nanny in the Bay Area, this video makes me wish we had proper training here. Families here rely mostly on experience and references than a child development degree, which does suffice, however, proper training would make it feel even more so as a profession the world takes seriously. I know its a proper profession but training would solidify a sense of professionalism via a degree.
Then people would be paying around 10k+ a year for 4 years for a job that would pay 37k a year on average. I'm sure there's some type of training for being a nanny in the U.S., but problem is, when you get a lot of people with degrees in a field, people start to expect* new hires to have a degree. So then, what do you get? Lower paying jobs with higher requirements, and a lot of loans. In the end of the day anyway, I'd bet that people would much rather hire family friends or those who were recommended as nannies over some stranger with training.
@@AAAAAAAA23909 stranger with training is getting paid and would do a whole lot better at protecting the infant of a high profile individual. I'm assuming the higher you go the less people trust their own families.
@@AAAAAAAA23909 I hate how education in US is so insanely expensive that people actually prefer to not pursue professional education
Be the person to start the company!!! You might be surprised, maybe it could be very successful! Honestly even some mothers might find certain classes useful.
i am so astonished to watch this video as they are so trained girl to protect the children. They are so dexterous about their work i.e sewing,defence,coocking & caring the children. They are earning so much in comparison of other professional.
I don't even want to be a nanny but the skills they're learning are things I wish I knew
I know, right? I'd go there just to learn all that stuff
I’ve been a nanny for over 15 years in the US and I love it so much. This actually looks like so much fun!
Umm then how did u colour ur hair?
@@mirachowdhury2538that’s a norland nanny rule, not a worldwide one 😐
These classes should be mandatory for everyone when they start college instead of those bs gym classes. How to cook, defend yourself, and care for a child (if you want to have a kid). Also swimming and cpr should be part of it too
@@WildVee gym is a bs course that teaches students nothing it's mandatory because its a bandaid for the obesity problem in the states but nevertheless it hasn't decreased rates of eating disorders or obesity so its useless. And in the states there is no unified curriculum thus some people will learn swimming and cpr other won't so this person's probably from the states and that why their complaing about gym and cpr.
@@WildVee I did swimming at school but only did CPR with a youth group. I agree with OP, gym is fine but it's not that useful. Make kids do one extra sport class after school a week and sub this in.
I agree. Cooking, defense should be mandatory. Also we could learn tech skills like using the drill, painting, fixing an air-conditioner
@@WildVee ok If that's agreed then why are you trying to disagree with this person lol like what's the point of your comment?
@@xxcallmeniaxx3272 thank you!
Someone: * breaks in the house during night time
The nanny who graduated from this school: Im not locked in here with you, you're locked in here with me