Little rascals daycare kansas city: Little Rascals Day Care Home

Опубликовано: February 15, 2023 в 8:11 pm

Автор:

Категории: Miscellaneous

Little Rascals Day Care Home

Write a Review

About the Provider

22-10-2022 (Part-03) | Blogger Post Information

Description: Little Rascals Day Care Home is a Licensed Day Care Home in Kansas City KS, with a maximum capacity of 10 children. The provider does not participate in a subsidized child care program.

Program and Licensing Details

  • License Number:
    0061644-010
  • Capacity:
    10
  • Enrolled in Subsidized Child Care Program:
    No
  • Current License Issue Date:
    Nov 01, 2017
  • District Office:
    Kansas Dept of Health and Environment – Child Care Licensing Program
  • District Office Phone:
    785-296-1270 (Note: This is not the facility phone number.)

Location Map

Inspection/Report History

Where possible, ChildcareCenter provides inspection reports as a service to families. This information is deemed reliable,
but is not guaranteed. We encourage families to contact the daycare provider directly with any questions or concerns,
as the provider may have already addressed some or all issues. Reports can also be verified with your local daycare licensing office.

Date of Survey Survey Number Survey Reason Findings
2017-10-16 17-007280 Annual Survey View Findings
2017-10-16 17-007280 Annual Survey View Findings

If you are a provider and you believe any information is incorrect, please contact us. We will research your concern and make corrections accordingly.

Reviews

Be the first to review this childcare provider.
Write a review about Little Rascals Day Care Home. Let other families know what’s great, or what could be improved.
Please read our brief review guidelines to make your review as helpful as possible.

Email address (will not be published):

Display name:

Which best describes your experience?:

Select from belowI have used this provider for more than 6 monthsI have used this provider for less than 6 monthsI have toured this provider’s facility, but have not used its servicesI am the ownerI am an employeeOther

Rating (1=poor, 5=excellent):

Select your Rating1 star2 star3 star4 star5 star

Review Policy:

ChildcareCenter. us does not actively screen or monitor user reviews, nor do we verify or edit content. Reviews reflect
only the opinion of the writer. We ask that users follow our
review guidelines. If you see a review that does not reflect these guidelines, you can email us. We will assess
the review and decide the appropriate next step. Please note – we will not remove a review simply because it is
negative. Providers are welcome to respond to parental reviews, however we ask that they identify themselves as
the provider.

Write a Review


Providers in ZIP Code 66109

Next Generation

Wee Chipmunks Daycare

Ashleys Home Daycare

Christys Day Care Home

CuddleBugs Daycare

Dansereau Childcare Service Day Care Home

Happy Smiles

Harmonie Hawes Home Daycare

Jackies Day Care Home

Little Rascals Day Care Home

Lulus Little Angels

Mildred Slaughter Day Care Home

Pamela E Leiker Day Care Home

The Crayon Box

Valentine Day Care Home

A to Z Day Care

Little Rascals Christian Daycare – Kansas City, MO 64114

Is this your business?

Customize this page.

Claim This Business

Hours

Regular Hours

Mon – Fri:

Places Near Kansas City with Day Care Centers & Nurseries

  • Leawood (3 miles)
  • Prairie Village (6 miles)
  • Overland Park (7 miles)
  • Grandview (9 miles)
  • Mission (11 miles)
  • Shawnee Mission (11 miles)
  • Lenexa (11 miles)
  • Shawnee (15 miles)

More Types of Child Care Services in Kansas City

Child Support CollectionsFoster Care Agencies

More Info

Email
Email Business
Payment method
check
AKA

Little Rascals Christian Child Development Center

Categories

Day Care Centers & Nurseries, Child Care, Preschools & Kindergarten

Other Information

Parking: Lot, Free

Wheelchair Accessible: Yes

Reviews

Hi there!
Rate this business!

5First-class4Better than most3About what I expected2Not the worst. ..1Disappointing

Click to Rate

Overall

My kid was there till she was 1-1/2 years old. one of the teacher’s kids started biting her (arm, face, you name it). So she learned how to bite as well. As a result I got a letter that if she doesn’t correct her behavior, we have to find another daycare. However, nothing happened with the teacher’s child that started that mess. We didn’t wait and we left.

When she was a baby, they’d swaddle her when she was 6 months old and throw blanket on top of the pen to get her to sleep while she was crying. More than one time I’ve picked her up exhausted from crying and had to remind the staff that you swaddle newborns, not a 6-months olds! Very very high turnover, which is never a good sign. We’ve had our good moments there, but now that I compare the place to the new one… should have pulled her out of there a long time ago.

Save yourself the trouble. Go to Punkin Patch inside of First Baptist Church on Wornall and Red Bridge. Amazing daycare, very low turnover. In every room my child had a favorite teacher, and the kids get lots of outdoors time!

Helpful(0)Flag

Overall

STAY FAR AWAY! They seemed very caring when my child came here as a baby. As time has passed, the staff turnover has become unacceptable. I never know which classroom my child will be in and with what teacher. She doesn’t even know who is her primary teacher. The place is dirty, the babysitters (I’m not sure most of the staff has even a high school education based upon their vocabulary skills) are always grouped together talking on the playground. I’ve personally witnessed boys engaged in fist fighting (more than twice) and the adults paying no attention. I’ve witnessed a toddler climb onto a rocker and fall backwards on the floor and the adult should have seen he was in danger. But she was on the floor with her phone not paying attention. There is never soap or hand towels in either the kid’s bathroom or even at the sink in the classroom. It is disgusting, the director is uncaring and I’ve heard her speak to children AND parents in a rude and I don’t give damn voice. I want my child in a setting where she feels love and protected by the caregivers I trust to care for her. This place doesn’t even deserve one star and my baby will never go back.

Helpful(0)Flag

Details

Phone: (816) 997-9030

Address: 1170 W 103rd St, Kansas City, MO 64114

People Also Viewed

  • Cirilla’s

    7236 Wornall Rd, Kansas City, MO 64114

  • 5,"hasTripAdvisor":false,"geography":"Overland Park, KS","mip_claimed_status":"mip_unclaimed","mip_ypid":"10261907","ids":"490263"}”>The Goddard School

    11060 Oakmont St, Overland Park, KS 66210

  • Brookwood Elementary School

    3411 W 103rd St, Leawood, KS 66206

  • Kumon Math and Reading Center

    11820 Quivira Rd, Overland Park, KS 66210

  • Old Mission United Methodist Church

    5519 State Park Rd, Fairway, KS 66205

  • The Goddard School

    14330 Metcalf Ave, Overland Park, KS 66223

  • The Daniel Academy
  • Grandview Middle School

    12650 Manchester Ave, Grandview, MO 64030

  • 5,"hasTripAdvisor":false,"geography":"Shawnee, KS","mip_claimed_status":"mip_claimed","mip_ypid":"15464419"}”>Peppermint Patty’s Day Care & Preschool

    5603 Nieman Rd, Shawnee, KS 66203

  • Day Care Connection

    8853 Long St, Shawnee Mission, KS 66215

My Russian adopted daughter: not only upbringing, but also treatment

InoSMI materials contain only foreign media assessments and do not reflect the position of the InoSMI editors

Let’s return to the ban on adoptions. Yes, 20 deaths is terrible. And yes, thousands of American families are doing their best to raise hard-hit adopted children. Most of these parents expend enormous emotional and financial resources to give their children a real chance at life.

Tina Traster

A few weeks ago, Radio Free Europe producer Olga Loginova spent a day with my family at our home in New York State filming our “ordinary life.” She was working on a six-minute story that she said needed to be done urgently. She wanted to show the whole world, and especially the Russians, that there are “examples of successful adoption from Russia.”

The issue of Russian orphans and how well they are treated in American foster families has become a hotspot of a tangled political conflict. It all started with the passage of the Magnitsky Act by the US government, aimed at the Russian approach to human rights issues. The confrontation escalated after Russia responded by banning the practice of adopting orphans by American families that had existed for more than two decades. Russian propagandists, citing several notorious cases, vilify American foster parents in general and perpetuate the idea that Americans are monsters. nine0003

As a result, dozens of American adoptive parents found themselves in limbo, just like small children languishing in Russian orphanages. Jan Wondra, vice president of Families for Russian and Ukrainian Adoption (FRUA), says 700 American families have filed adoption papers with Russian authorities and are now in state of uncertainty, with approximately 230 of them having already met their children. Many organizations and activists here and abroad are now fighting – publicly or behind the scenes – to lift the ban. However, his Russian supporters have a powerful argument: “At the hands of American parents, 20 children adopted in Russia died.” nine0003

See also: Russia is a conveyor of orphans

“Look, world,” they say, “something is very wrong with the way Americans raise our children. It’s dangerous for our children. The ban is justified and must be maintained.” Just last month, less than 60 days after the ban went into effect, three-year-old Max Shatto, who was adopted in Russia last October, was found dead in the street outside his Texas home. The Russians screamed for the kill. The news reinforced their belief that Americans are bad parents. An autopsy showed that the child died from self-inflicted injuries, but this was not believed in Russia. nine0003

No one denies that 20 deaths of children adopted from Russia is an alarming statistic. Even if you take it in the context of all 60 thousand adoptions, something is really wrong with this. Indeed. I know this because I adopted a girl from Russia and because I constantly communicate with the foster parents of Russian orphans.

This is a common experience among American parents raising children adopted in Russia. Children come to us with emotional and/or physical problems. Some of us are ready for this – or at least aware of the difficulties even before adoption. But for most it comes as a surprise when they discover that children do not become attached to them. This problem is called reactive attachment disorder and is caused by an early separation from the biological mother. Babies don’t get the affection and care they deserve. In shelters, their needs are barely met. As a result, they subconsciously get used to the fact that it is dangerous to become attached to people. nine0003

Also related: Putin’s Commissar for the Protection of Russian Orphans from Americans

Therefore, adopted children from Russia are often distant, depressed, hostile. They are overly excitable, demanding, insatiable and difficult to control. Some of them already in diapers are cruel to themselves and to others. At the same time, they are physically strong. The 20 deaths we know are just the tip of the iceberg of mistreatment and neglect. I don’t have exact numbers, but from what I’ve heard, for children adopted in Russia, serious behavioral problems are the rule rather than the exception. Dozens of adoptive parents suffer in silence, ashamed and trying to understand how it is that they have traveled half the world at least twice to get a child who rejects their love. nine0003

Nothing is more overwhelming than trying to hug and rock an eight-month-old baby who pushes you away. I can tell you a lot about how painful it is when you try to get attached to a child who won’t let you near him. For a long time you engage in self-denial and think that something is wrong with you. You hope to heal the child with love. Then one day you realize that love alone may not be enough. You’re trying to understand how children who start life in orphanages think. Finally, you begin to realize that the business of your life from now on will not only raise your child, but also try to heal him. nine0003

Ten years ago, my husband Rick and I brought a child from a Siberian orphanage. We had a difficult time, but when our daughter was 3 years old, we learned about reactive attachment disorder and started working with her. We used a variety of pedagogical techniques. Over time, they began to have an effect, and Julia gradually became attached to my husband and me, and we became attached to her.

Read also: A teenager from Russia adopted by an American family decided to return to Cheboksary

The Russian government does not want to admit its involvement in this problem. Julia lived in a gloomy, gray building that smelled of ammonia. She was one of ten babies in the ward and one of 100 in Orphanage No. 2. When we brought her home in February 2003, her skin was as white as alabaster because she had never, ever been outside or seen daylight. I can only guess how often she cried and no one paid any attention to it. How she wanted to be picked up – but they did not take her. Over time, she realized that you can not count on affection, and learned to expect less. It may take her a lifetime to shed the consequences of these harsh lessons learned in infancy. As Julia’s mother, I understand that her struggle is my struggle. nine0003

Let’s go back to the ban on adoptions. Yes, 20 deaths is terrible. And yes, thousands of American families are doing their best to raise hard-hit adopted children. Most of these parents expend enormous emotional and financial resources to give their children a real chance at life.

Our family is considered “an example of a successful adoption from Russia”, because Julia is attached to her parents and is in a good condition. We understand how lucky we are. We also understand how fragile such luck is. Too often—more often than you can imagine—these kids go too far. As a result, they end up in foster families, rehabilitation centers or even prisons. nine0003

Foreign adoption is not ideal, but there is only one alternative: Russian children will grow up in orphanages. We are talking about about 700 thousand children living in Russian orphanages. As much as Russian prohibitionists would like to continue using their orphans as political pawns, they should stop vilifying “American parents in a vacuum. ” In fact, it is a great success for the Russians that there are American families who are ready to try to glue together the broken lives of Russian children from the fragments. nine0003

US Malls – US History

Category: Articles

Views: 6984

  • US economy and business at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries

  • Review papers on the social history of the United States

Burtsev V.

Shopping malls and department stores in America are a great way to spend time. The largest shopping complexes are called malls, where American families spend most of their time. This is not only a place for shopping – in such complexes there are many restaurants, fast foods, cinemas; they go there on dates, put on performances, spend the weekend. There are currently over 2,000 malls in the United States, with a total annual revenue of about $300 billion. nine0003

Country Club Plaza

One of the most successful department stores was Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Missouri, opened in 1923. His image formed the basis of future shopping centers. This idea of ​​creating shopping complexes or malls was embodied by the architect Victor Gruen. He suggested that all the shops be under the same roof. In 1954, when the USSR entered UNESCO, and Brezhnev became the second secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Kazakhstan, Gruen built his first shopping center in the suburbs of Detroit. The department store was called Northland, and was surrounded by many small shops. In addition, there was a large car park. However, it was not a fully covered complex. But already October 8, 1956 opened the first indoor department store in one of the wealthy areas of Minneapolis. This complex, Southdale Center, contained 72 shops and restaurants. To convince the visitor that he is in an open space, the complex was decorated with trees, flowers, flower beds and a glass roof. Unlike Northland, here all the stores were in the same building. Until the 1970s, one such mall opened every three to four days in the US.

World Trade Center

The New York World Trade Center (Twin Towers) was a seven-building complex in Manhattan designed by American architect Minoru Yamasaki and engineer Leslie Robertson. The World Trade Center was one of the most striking American architectural designs. Construction began on August 5, 1966. All of the original buildings in the complex were destroyed in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack.

Mall of America

On August 11, 1992, the largest shopping complex in the USA, Mall Of America, founded by the Hermezian brothers, opened its doors to this day. Before that, they already had an idea about malls, having built a huge entertainment center West Edmonton Mall in Canada. After winning a tender from the government of Bloomington, Minnesota, for a piece of land, in 1989 they began to make Mall Of America a reality. The goal was to build an attractive place to visit, not just a mall. Like other malls, this place combines shopping and entertainment.