Gender Equality: Men in Child Care, the Last Frontier?

2010-02-24
By

Anthony D’Tiole, 20, of Moraga, Ca. says when he first started out, he had to work harder to get the jobs that came easily to his female counterparts.  “They might have five interviews and be offered four jobs,” he said, “I’d have 20 interviews; and if I was lucky, I’d be offered one position.”  D’Tiole is a male child care provider, a male nanny, a “manny.”

Some parents admit to having a preference for a female nanny because they fear their children could become victims of sexual abuse, even while acknowedging that it’s wrong to suspect all men.  Women commit 14% to 40% of sexual abuse reported against boys and 6% of offenses reported against girls.

“If we want truly egalitarian parenting and society as a whole — shouldn’t that include men in nurturing roles?,” asks Elisa on the blog Mother Talkers.  While men only make up 1% to 10% of paid nannies nationwide, and about 5% of licensed child care providers, a higher number of casual, unpaid caregivers of adults and children are men.

The New York Office for the Aging reports that 39% of the caregivers aged 18 and older who provide unpaid care to another adult who is 18 or older are male. Some unpaid male caregivers are caring for special needs children.  According to the National Alliance for Caregiving in Collaboration with AARP, Caregiving in the U.S. 2009, men comprise 28% of unpaid caregivers of these children.

D’Tiole attends St. Mary’s College, has experience as a camp counselor, and plans on counseling children of divorce one day.  “I start with, ‘I know you were planning on hiring a female, but let me tell you the benefits of having a male role model,” he said, “Once they see how good I am with kids, and the children insist on having me watch them, I get a lot of callbacks.”

Gloria Steinem told the Marin Independent Journal in 1995, “[I]f, as children, whether we’re boys or girls, we’re raised mainly by women, then we deeply believe that only women can be loving, nurturing, flexible, patient, compassionate, all those things one needs to be to raise little children, and that men cannot do that, which is a libel on men. Of course men can do that.”

“There are parents who hesitate to hire a male nanny,” says Dave Culp, franchise owner of  College Nannies & Tutors in the San Francisco Bay Area and Rookie of the Year, “But once they give them a chance, what we’re seeing nationwide is that they’re the most in demand.”

Along with baking cookies with the children, straightening up the house and helping with homework, male nannies can provide a more adventurous experience for children.  While women are more nurturing and protective, men encourage children to push their boundaries, to take risks.  And the benefits of male role models extend beyond the playground.   While women tend to comfort frustrated children, men usually encourage them to deal with frustration.

D’Tiole reports there were five men in his last child development class.  He entertained children by applying temporary tattoos during Green Valley Elementary School’s annual Family Fun auction, in Danville, Ca, Friday evening.  D’Tiole worked alongside two female colleagues from College Nannies & Tutors. Asked if he noticed any unusual reactions by parents to seeing a male nanny, he said, “One parent said, ‘I like the fact that you are a male who enjoys working with kids.”

See College Nannies & Tutors care for children and community.

Have you hired a male child care giver? Would you?

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  • Oz Cynic

    Run away, RUN AWAY, being a male “nanny” is a short-cut to a prison cell, when one of the little monsters decides to falsely accuse the guy of “inappropriate behaviour” Even worse, one of his female “colleagues” (who secretly wants the job) suddenly remembers some behaviour that might seem… shall we say, suspect?

    My God, you’d have to be either braver than Superman or have access the best legal team in the world to keep you out of prison.

    YEOWCH.

  • Phillip

    In today’s society with so many anti-male laws it is almost guaranteed that sooner or later someone will file charges against which no defense is sufficient. Just being charged with sexual abuse of a child is almost automatically a guilty verdict. It is one of the many crimes credited to men only where guilt is assumed even in spite of solid evidence otherwise. Too many just want a man jailed; any man.

  • Keyester

    I agree 100%.
    Men should avoid working with children.
    Too fraught with risk.
    All it takes is one false accusation and you’re ruined for life. Like Art Linkletter’s show, “Kids Say the Darndest Things”.
    Yes, they do, only now we believe them because they’re “equal” too.

  • DonnieH

    e.g., Gerald Amirault

    Parents should be quite concerned about child abuse committed by women, particularly sexual abuse of children, because women who commit it can do so with such freedom and impunity. Manwomanmyth has a recent series of videos on this.

  • Mr. Knight

    The advice of some seems to be to pre-emptively surrender to systemic stereotypes about men, and to meekly be ruled by those stereotypes while counseling other men to be ruled by those stereotypes too.

    Be men.

    Fight for the right for every man to be seen and treated for who he is as an individual, based on his real individual character and abilities.

  • julie

    Excellent article Teri. Thanks a lot for writing it.

  • Phillip

    The problem with fighting the system is that many men convicted of crimes, rape, homicide, porn, sexual abuse, etc., are actually not guilty. Prosecutors file charges they think they can win (for the political advancement), knowing full well at times the suspect is innocent. Check out innocenceproject.org, Google Joyce Gilchrist of the Oklahoma City police lab, the Houston, Tex lab and others.
    Until men and the honest women coalesce and form a united group, they’ll keep picking us off one by one. Fighting them single-handedly is folly.

  • Matthew

    There’s a very simple solution to the well-founded fear of false accusations of misconduct: wear some sort of personal recording device every minute you’re on the job, a nanny-cam you can pin on your shirt or something, they must make such a device. Let the parents know that you’re wearing it ahead of time. In fact, make it a condition of the employment contract – don’t ever work with children unless you’re permitted to protect your reputation. Solid advice for men and women alike.

  • http://sharedparentingworks.org teri stoddard

    Thanks Julie.

    Guys, I don’t think mannies have as much to worry about as men in child custody cases, as far as false accusations. Plus, it would be a criminal case. They’d have due process, which doesn’t exist in family courts in 49 states.

  • http://daddydetails.com/index.php/2010/02/26/news-to-use/ daddydetails.com » News to Use

    [...] You want gender equality that’s not actually skewed against men? Well, this would something. Imagine male nannies! This would be something wouldn’t it be? I would think this will take many, many years, if it is ever accepted at all. It’s odd enough to be a a stay-at-home-dad, or work-at-home-and-do-things-with-the-kids-dad, but this? Who knows, stranger things have certainly happened. (Men’s News Daily) [...]

  • http://shrink4men.wordpress.com Dr. Tara J. Palmatier

    While false charges happen all the time, it’s usually when a woman has an axe to grind against her husband or boyfriend in order to control, punish or take his assets. What would the incentive be to make false allegations against a manny—a person who does parenting work for a woman so she doesn’t have to? It would be like filing false charges against her maid or manicurist. Mannies and maids make privileged women’s lives even easier and working women’s lives easier.

    Understanding how the female mind works, I suspect most mommies would feel less competitive and less threatened by a manny than a nanny.

    Plus, having a male caregiver may be the only way some kids get access to a loving and caring male role model particularly if mommy has cut daddy out of the picture or if daddy is working 70 hours a week to pay for the manny. It also gives children disqualifying evidence later on when they’re fed the drivel that, “men aren’t nurturing” and “all men are predators.”

    As a woman, I would be more inclined to hire a qualified male caregiver for my child if only so they could have a different experience from the female dominated teaching professions and other child care services. My memories of female dominated academia and the caring professions are not good. In fact, the more female dominated a clinic, school or office setting I was in, the less warm and nurturing it was. Shudder. Just had a flashback to the 12 female social workers I used to work with—time for a cognac to drive away the chill that just crept across my heart.

    Best,
    Dr Tara J. Palmatier, PsyD

  • auntieofautie

    Thank GOD for MEN! Male caregivers are an absolute necessity for people who are in situations like you find on You Tube when you type in “behavioral and medical challenges in autism” or google “autism self-injury” and a bunch of videos come up and let me tell ya, this is probably the best example of how MALE nures/caregivers are, at best, a HUGE assest to injury prevention. We’re talking a tall strong autistic patient who beats the tar outta himself and I don’t see a female nurse being able to do this. No sir. This is definately a man’s job. I bet people aren’t aware that many High risk autistic patients with “self abusive behaviors” or aggression are being let out of instiutions and pushed back into communities now and there is a HUGE need for male nurses (lvn cnas) and caregivers for home health and inside group homes in california.

  • Mr. Knight

    @ auntieofautie

    You say that men should be spending their time restraining violent adults.

    That’s dangerous, unpleasant, and insulting: a clear echo of what men are compelled to take on all the time.

    This is about men becoming equally represented in the kinder, gentler work typically given to women only: caring for babies, for example.






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