We have been going to this kindergarten for almost 2 months. The child is 1 year 11 months old. We got a good tutor and a nanny. That the same cannot be said about the garden itself.
Plus:
- it is located close to the house, so if something is needed, you can quickly take it.
Cons (there are many of them):
- design of the kindergarten, educational attributes and educational toys in a minimum amount;
- the kindergarten has a delivery service for both rural and urban children. We do not use it because the garden is located on the same street with the house. The disadvantage is that according to the contract, the kindergarten works from 8.30 to 17.30, but at 8.30 there is neither a tutor nor a nanny (only a duty tutor), since everyone comes by a delivery bus. They arrive at 9.00 and have breakfast at about 9.15. It turns out that the child goes hungry from 8.30 to 9.15. Also, with the evening delivery at 16.45, they are already starting to write and call about taking the child from the garden at exactly 17.00, since the educators are leaving with the children;
- as I understand it, everything in Mali is in minimal quantity, both food and hygiene products. The child often does not come full, and once a month the educators ask to bring dry and wet wipes, toilet paper from the kindergarten;
- the doors of the practical kindergarten are always closed, although all groups are on the 2nd floor, that is, it will not work to calmly go in and see what your child is doing, because after knocking, the door is usually opened by a methodist and she yells at the whole floor that a parent has come and only then the educator himself lets the child down;
- what does the head of the kindergarten do in general is not clear to me, since she arrives in the morning and evening on a delivery truck, and at lunch she is always not in the building.
At the end of November, the child will turn 2 years old and I am happy, I can't wait to transfer her to the Aisaul State Kindergarten