By Luke Yates 2026.04.30
Families searching for a nanny for a child with developmental, behavioral, or medical differences are often doing one of the more difficult searches in private childcare, and they’re frequently doing it while also managing the emotional complexity of their child’s specific situation. The search requires more precision than standard nanny placement, draws from a narrower candidate pool, and demands a level of specificity in both the job description and the candidate assessment that general childcare searches don’t require to the same degree. Getting this search right matters more, not less, than a standard placement, because a child who has specific needs is a child for whom the wrong caregiver isn’t just a mismatch but a potential harm. What Experience Actually Looks Like Here The first thing families need to clarify is what kind of experience is actually relevant to their child’s specific profile. A nanny who has worked with children on the autism spectrum has developed knowledge and skills that are directly applicable to some children and not particularly applicable to others. The experience that matters is experience with the specific type of needs the child has, not just general “special needs experience,” which is a category too broad to be useful. Families who describe their child’s needs specifically in the job description attract candidates whose experience is actually relevant. Families who say “experience with special needs preferred” attract candidates with a wide range of experience, some of it applicable and some not, and the sorting has to happen in the interview rather than before it. Beyond the type of experience, the depth of it matters. There’s a difference between a nanny who has had one child with ADHD in a prior placement and one who has worked exclusively with children who have behavioral and attentional differences across several positions and years. The first has some relevant exposure. The second has developed genuine expertise. Both might list similar experience on a resume. The difference shows up in how they talk about the work. The Personal Qualities That Matter Most Technical knowledge about a child’s specific condition is necessary but not sufficient. The qualities that make someone genuinely effective as a caregiver for a child with special needs go deeper than training. Patience that is genuine and deep-rooted rather than performed is the baseline. A child who experiences the world differently from neurotypical children, who has behavioral expressions that can be challenging, who may communicate differently or respond to typical approaches in atypical ways, needs a caregiver whose patience comes from a stable internal place rather than from effort. Effort runs out. Genuine patience doesn’t. Flexibility in the moment, meaning the ability to read a child’s state and adjust the approach in real time rather than following a script, is another quality that matters enormously for this work. A child with sensory differences, or with anxiety, or with behavioral regulation challenges, doesn’t have consistent good days that follow predictable patterns. The caregiver who can shift rapidly between approaches, who isn’t destabilized when what worked yesterday doesn’t work today, is providing something specific and valuable. Where Families Often Search in the Wrong Places General nanny job boards produce a broad candidate pool that includes some candidates with relevant experience and many without. The families who find the strongest candidates for special needs positions are usually working with agencies that have specific relationships with caregivers who have built expertise in this area, or who are connected to professional communities where caregivers with relevant backgrounds are more concentrated. Families who are also connected to parent communities through their child’s school, therapy, or support network often find useful referrals through those connections, because other parents of children with similar profiles have often already done the search and can speak to what actually worked. At Seaside Nannies, special needs placements require the same additional care at every step of the process that the position itself requires. The search takes longer, the candidate pool is smaller, and the match assessment is more involved. Those are the right conditions for getting it right.Lorem ipsum color sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. 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As our social media manager, Jade Stevenson is one of the primary gatekeepers to our Seaside story.
With a Bachelor’s degree in English Literature and Psychology, Jade is a natural champion of authenticity, and she uses her whimsically pink hair to nudge all of us closer to her magical world of creative expression.
As a kid, Jade discovered she was allergic to more than 60 percent of the food pyramid, and it is in this journey where she began to learn just how important it is to show up as a force of kindness in the world. She holds an unwavering belief in the power of story, and she believes that small acts of compassion can truly spark a movement of positivity and change.
When she’s not showing up with her digital marketing genius at Seaside, Jade can be easily spotted (thanks to her pink hair) tutoring local teens and helping them write the types of college essays that earn acceptance letters from the schools of their dreams.
Equally at home whether she’s amplifying the voices of Black Femmes or losing herself in the quiet stillness of an ancient book of poetry, Jade is a living expression of what it means to fully embrace your truest self. When you meet her, you’ll immediately feel like you’re right at home, and she’ll always help you discover and celebrate the best parts of who you are.
Jessica He has spent her entire life stepping feet first into the big, wide world, making every corner of it feel like home – no matter where she’s at.
Earning two Bachelor’s degrees in Chinese language and East Asian Studies, she’s traveled the world to study in monasteries, climb Mount Fuji, and drink tea and coffee with otters. (Yes, that last one is real. Ask her about it.) She’s also served as an ESL teacher, a recruiter, a trainer, and a nanny – always finding ways to work alongside families and children. Today, she brings all her stories and all her experiences to Seaside Staffing Company where she makes the art of perfect matchmaking look flawlessly simple.
When Jessica isn’t in the Seaside office, she’s a busy momma who knows firsthand what it’s like to be in the trenches and need support. Unashamed to claim her sense of humor as one of her greatest talents, Jessica is perpetually positive, fiercely organized, and always seems to find a way to bring levity to the hardest-to-solve problems. Knowing Jessica means you’ll never forget how to laugh, and she’ll give you the courage to live your life to the fullest.
(Want to see her humor in action? Ask her about the time she lived in China and got her Oreos confiscated by a very disappointed nun.)
With an MBA in HR Management and Accounting, Kim might best be described as a people expert.
She spent six years teaching children online in China as an ESL instructor, and with a TESOL certification in her proverbial back pocket, it’s no wonder why she shows up at Seaside every single day with a big, bold view of the world.
Over the last decade, Kim has served as a recruiter and a placement coordinator in the household staffing industry, and she’s learned that while systems are incredibly important, relationships matter more. It’s not uncommon to hear Seaside clients talk to Kim like she’s their best friend. They know she’ll go to the ends of the earth for them (and we’ve seen her do it countless times).
When Kim isn’t at Seaside, she can most likely be found 4-wheeling through the dirt and taking long hikes with her dogs. She’s always up for a great adventure, and she says one of the craziest things she’s ever done is buying an Amish house with no electricity or hot water (besides that one time in high school when she thought it was a great idea to buy a car with a giant British flag painted on the hood).
“The basement of our house used to be a bakery,” she says. “When I’m dreaming about escaping to New Zealand or Scotland, I just head downstairs, take in a deep breath, and imagine myself eating a delicious cinnamon roll baked to sticky-finger perfection.”