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You are essentially asking a young girl who is there as a member of your family to dress in a uniform-thereby setting her apart from you and your family. Would you expect the same from any other young girl-related or not-in your home? Why can't you just suggest that she dress nicely on these special occasions,without setting such rigid specifics? It would make life much easier,and she would also fit in better both with you,and your guests. She is supposed to be treated as a social equal-not some sort of underling.
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" Hosting an au pair should be a rewarding experience for your family. An au pair comes to the UK as part of a cultural exchange, to live here and experience our culture within the safe confines of your family. They will help you with childcare and house-hold chores in return for board and lodging at your house. It is a great system which has been running for many decades and if you remember to treat them as a member of your family and not as a domestic employee, you will reap the benefits. "
The above quote is from here - http://www.sosaupairs.com/find-an-au-pair |
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Yep smack on pasta- we've had Au Pairs and would NEVER dream of treating them like that- it's really disgraceful.
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I always let the butler deal with below stairs staff
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I think I need to ask you - do you make your own children follow the same rules, i.e. dress stiffly and formally when you have guests? If you don't, then you are discriminating. Of course she agreed when she was 16, what would you expect, she was being polite to her new hosts. You make her dress like your secretary - no wonder she rebels. I'd expect house rules to include times for coming in at night, not letting friends stay over (has she got any?), no drink in the bedroom - and so on. Not dressing your au pair in livery.
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Of course, having your wife dress up as a French maid is another matter, but I don't think she'd approve if the au pair provided you with quite the personal service that followed. And there's no point in making provision of that service a 'house rule'.
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what she agreed to is irrelevant - as you are talking about the new one who is due to come soon - it is unlikely that she will agree to wearing a uniform around her own home
i expect the first one agreed because - as a teen - she probably thought you just meant you wanted her to dress nicely on special occasions - as anyone would expect guests too... i expect she didnt realise what you actually had in mind ... hence her now refusing |
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Jipper, the second paragraph describing your dilemma reads disturbingly like new-dog-training problems. I realise that this may in part be due to the fact that English is not your mother tongue. I also realise that it's sometimes difficult for employers such as yourself to understand where au pair help ends and cheap domestic labour begins. By definition, and to repeat what most of the others have said, an au pair lives, albeit temporarily, on a par, or equal footing, with the family.
To avoid future conflict with recalcitrant au pairs, I suggest you acquaint yourself with your responsibilities as 'host' and be prepared to modify your expectations . The alternative is to do the job yourself. |
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