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Your au pair has chosen to spend
a year of her life living far from friends and family. There are
many motivating reasons for this decision, not the least of which
is to learn more about life in the United States. You have chosen
Au Pair in America as a child care solution. The cultural exchange
component of the program can be educational, enriching and rewarding
for your family.
Here are some ideas for maximizing the benefits of cultural exchange.
- When an au pair arrives, she probably has brought pictures from
home. Ask to see the pictures, and ask her about her family, her home
town, her country.
- Share information about your family, your occupation, your
community.
- Ask the au pair what she likes to eat. If her preferred foods
are available locally, buy them and taste them. If she likes to
cook, invite her to make foods from home to share with the family.
Start a cookbook with international favorites. Offer her some
American recipes to take home.
- Show the au pair your children’s favorite storybooks
and teach her nursery rhymes and songs that might be part of their
everyday routine.
- Encourage your au pair to teach the children songs, games and
phrases from her country.
- Have local maps and tourist information available to the au
pair. Help her to plan her vacation time to see other parts of
the United States.
- Ask the au pair to show you and the children where she lives
on a map or on a globe.
- Encourage your au pair to visit the children’s school
to share information about her country. Most teachers would embrace
this opportunity.
- In the United States we celebrate holidays that are either
unique to this country, or are unique in how they are celebrated.
Share your celebrations and give the au pair the opportunity to
experience our holidays.
- Your au pair may be of a different religion than you, but even
if she isn’t, her holiday customs may be different. Find
out what they are, enable her to share them with you, and accommodate
her whenever you can in her own celebration.
- Explain customs and habits to your au pair that may seem routine
to you but might be different for her. Don’t assume that
she will know how we do things or understand what we do.
- Encourage the au pair to tell you what seems strange to her.
Encourage her to ask you questions about how we do things in the
U.S.
- Include her as part of the family’s activities but accept
when she wants to go out on her own.
- Investing time and energy in cultural exchange may someday
culminate in a memorable trip to visit the au pair in her own
country.
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