Babysitting
Caring for children |
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At home |
Outside the home |
Educational settings |
Institutions and standards |
Related |
Babysitting is the practice of temporarily caring for a child. Babysitting is commonly performed as a job by teenagers for extra money.
General
Babysitters are usually aged 12[1] and above. The type of work for babysitters also varies from watching a sleeping child, changing diapers, playing games, preparing meals, to teaching the child to read or even driving (if the age is right), depending on the agreement between parents and babysitter.
In some countries various organizations produce courses for babysitters, mainly focusing on child safety and first aid appropriate for infants and children. These classes or courses can be provided at local hospitals and sometimes even schools. These classes can equip the babysitter with information to keep both the child, or children, and sitter safe in various health and weather scenarios.
Word History
The term "baby sitter" first appeared in 1937, while the verb form "baby-sit" was first recorded in 1947.[2] The American Heritage College Dictionary notes "One normally would expect the agent noun babysitter with its -er suffix to come from the verb baby-sit, as diver comes from dive, but in fact babysitter is first recorded in 1937, ten years earlier than the first appearance of baby-sit. Thus the verb was derived from the agent noun rather than the other way around, and represents a good example of back-formation.[3] The use of the word "sit" to abbreviate to refer to a baby-sitter is recorded from 1800. The term may have originated from the action of the caretaker "sitting on" the baby in one room, while the parents were entertaining or busy in another.
International variations in definition
In British English the term refers only to caring for a child for a few hours, on an informal basis and usually in the evening when the child is asleep for most of the time.[4] In American English the term can include caring for a child for the whole or most of the day, and on a regular or more formal basis, which would be described as childminding in British English.
In India and Pakistan a babysitter or nanny is known as an ayah or aya, a person hired on a longer term contract basis to look after a child regardless of the presence of the parents.
References
Notes
- ↑ Dupaix, Madison. "Age For Babysitting." About.com Kids & Money. About.com, n.d. Web. 13 Mar. 2013.
- ↑ Greenwald, Ken. "Babysitting." Word Wizard. Google.com, Sept.-Oct. 2003. Web.
- ↑ "baby-sit", The American Heritage College Dictionary, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2002, p. 103
- ↑ Admin. "10 Interesting Facts About the Etymology of Babysitter | Babysitters." Babysitters. Babysitters.net, 23 Jan. 2012. Web. 13 Mar. 2013.
Bibliography
- Miriam Forman-Brunell. Babysitter: An American History. New York University Press, June, 2009.
External links
Look up babysitting in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Babysitting courses provided by the American Red Cross
- YourChild: Babysitter Safety University of Michigan Health System
- A guide to the business of babysitting in the United States
- Quality Child Care From University of Florida/IFAS Department of Family, Youth and Community Sciences, Factors in choosing quality child care.