Business & Tech
From Temper Tantrums to Trophy Children: Ellicott City Super Granny Nanny to the Rescue
A Maryland grandmother, inspired by television's Supernanny, has her own practice. Hear her stories of curing temper tantrums and other family emotional ills.

Laura Steele started cooking up the idea to become the Super Granny Nanny after watching the hit reality ABC television show with the similar name.
āI remember seeing [The Supernanny], and watching a couple of episodes and saying to myself, āI can do that. Better.ā ā
Steele, 68, of Oella, the historic mill town in western Baltimore County, is a part-time parenting coach and psychotherapist. She started calling herself the āSuper Granny Nannyā about four years ago when she couldnāt shake her concern for the families left in the aftermath of Supernanny Jo Frostās advice.
Find out what's happening in Columbiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
āI kept wondering to myself, whatās happening to those families after she leaves?ā she said.
The Maryland Super Granny Nanny was born.
Find out what's happening in Columbiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
āI kind of do it ā [as] a grandmother with expertise and experience ā which is what I am,ā she said.
Steele has two grown children and five grandchildren.
She charges $50 for half-hour sessions, which can occur in person or on the phone. She helps parents throughout Maryland and the country deal with kidsā temper tantrums, sleeping issues, obedience or whatever other issue they might be grappling with.
Before she became the granny nanny, Steele was a therapist for the Infants and Toddler Program, which is a federally mandated initiative that provides home-based services for children birth to 3 with developmental delays.
She was a counselor through the program, employed first by Anne Arundel County, then by Montgomery County, which she points out are among the highest-earning areas in the country.
āI worked for families who had the nanny, and what I saw was ā you know the term ātrophy wife?ā ā Well there are ātrophy children.ā I saw a number of moms who really arenāt moms. Everything was put off on the nanny and that was the connection with the kids. Not with mom and not with dad. The nanny.ā
Steele said she has worked with both wealthy families and those struggling on the economic continuum, but the fact remains that Howard County, where her practice is based, is among the top 10 wealthiest areas nationally, with a median household income of $101,003, according to U.S. Census data.
Montgomery County is in the top 20 wealthiest counties nationwide, with a median income of $92,213, and Anne Arundel is among the top 40 counties nationwide, with $81,824 as the median household income.
āA lot of families in the upper middle class are two working parents, and there isnāt a lot of time,ā she said. āI think one of the more difficult items is to help families figure out how to make spending one-on-one time with their kids a priority.ā
Today, Steele said there is even less time for togetherness between families, especially as belt-tightening occurs in hard economic times.
āThose stresses are even more so,ā she said. āThere is less energy, less time and less connection.ā
Linda Baker, chair of the department of psychology at University of Maryland Baltimore County, said time isnāt the only factor in how parents spend with their children.
āWhen parents have more time with their child, they are busy with other things,ā she said. āWhen they have limited time, they have more focus, they talk with the child. Thatās the most important thing parents can do.ā
Baker notes, though, that she endorses the idea of struggling parents seeking professional help from someone like a parent coach or the granny nanny, an impartial observer.
āItās reasonable because parents sometimes arenāt aware of how they are actually interacting and responding with a child,ā she said. āHaving somebody more detached and objective actually can be helpful.ā
Bodil Eriksson, a parenting coach based in Bethesda, said she helps clients in suburban Maryland and Baltimore County, as well as around the world.
For parents living in and around the Beltway, commuting challenges often translate into behavioral issues, she said.
āParents are stressed out by traffic, and how do they keep their child [behaving] in the car, sitting on the Beltway waiting to get home from commuting?ā said Eriksson, who charges $75 per hour to coach parents.
āOne of the things I do is help them understand how to do āself careā and look at what are they doing for themselves to stay sane,ā she added, explaining that she has counseled parents with a long commute with their children to take a five-minute break before they start, and take the time to eat before they pick up their child.
Steele also said that in many cases she is there is listen to parents and coach them on how to evaluate their own feelings and experience.
She recalls one case in which a mother struggled with one of her sons, a toddler, who was having frequent temper tantrums. Steele urged the woman to record in a diary when the meltdowns occurred and how long they lasted.
The mother noticed that the tantrums were not as long as she thought and they occurred before mealtimes or other transitions in the day. Steele said she urged her to give lots of warnings and cues that changes in the boyās day were going to occur.
āSome kids, especially kids with certain temperaments, have a really hard time with transitions,ā she said. āIt just confuses them. And when a little kid is confused, they have a meltdown.ā
Steele, who is still developing her online presence and does not have a website, can be found at lsteele66@verizon.net.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.