-
November 2023 by Rachel Escobedo
We were so l just to stumble across SCK! My kids just bloomed after starting there. They are great with communicating. I felt so comfortable leaving my kids in their care. I highly recommend them if you are looking for a place for your child. We started our daughter when she was 16 months and my son was there from 2- almost 5. I honestly feel like they truly love my kids and there’s not a better feeling.
-
December 2018 by Kate Delwiche
My family sent two of our girls through St. Croix Kids and we were thrilled with the experience. The teachers are all warm, kind and loving to ALL of the children. My girls were also well prepared both academically and socially for kindergarten. We were so blessed to find such a perfect fit for our family.
-
December 2018 by Colin Kelly
This is an excellent daycare and preschool in Stillwater. I would definitely recommend it to anyone looking for quality care for their child or children. Both of our kids went to St. Croix Kids and we were very satisfied with the teachers, the facility, and the director. The teachers and director were always courteous and friendly, and the facility was clearly a place of learning and fun, not to mention clean and orderly. Two big playgrounds and play areas outside make this a wonderful place for kids to be kids; to get out and have a blast with their friends, being active and creative. Although we explored many options for daycare and preschool in Stillwater, we went with St. Croix Kids and are so glad that we did. If you are looking for kind, professional caregivers in a warm and welcoming environment, look no further!
-
December 2018 by E A
Consider all other options with all seriousness before before leaving you child in their hands because your kid(s) could be singled out and ignored in more ways than one. One kid was always made to live in the back corner of the room whether it was lesson time or nap time. I noticed this consistently on three separate occasions when I went to pickup my kid (my wife usually did the pick-up), so I checked with her and, sure enough, she confirmed that’s always the case with that one particular kid. Another example: they do a bbq event occasionally where they invite all the parents. On one of these events which my wife and I were in attendance, a mother arrived to pick up her kid but appeared a bit out of place. When my wife approached her to introduce herself and start smalltalk to get her comfortable, it became apparent she wasn’t invited to the parents bbq. The lesson here is that the first kid I described above is Asian (likely Korean, possibility Chinese) and the other was of African descent. You do the math. Although this didn’t concern our kid- white kid at a daycare that’s 99.99% white, we eventually decided to pull our kid from this facility because we felt it was essential that our kid gets chance at a real-world multicultural experience growing up.