Childcare
Childcare
Childcare
usually from newborn to age thirteen. Child care is the action or skill of looking after children by a day-care day care center, babysitter, or other providers. Child care is a broad topic covering a wide spectrum of contexts, activities, social and cultural ultural conventions, and institutions. The majority of child care institutions that are available require that child care providers have extensive training in first aid and are CPR certified. In addition, background checks, drug testing, t and reference verification are normally a requirement. Child care can cost up to $15,000 for one year in the United States. Approximately six out of every ten children, children, or almost 12 million children, age five and younger, are being jointly cared for by parents and early childhood educators, relatives, or other child-care providers.[1]
Contents
1 Common types o 1.1 Western society o 1.2 Family child care o 1.3 Center-based based care o 1.4 Informal care o 1.5 England 2 Effects on child development 3 The value of unpaid d child care 4 Learning stories 5 History o 5.1 First child care in human prehistory o 5.2 Plato 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External links
Common types
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Western society
It is traditional in Western society for children to be taken care of by their parents or their legal guardians. . In families where children live with one or both of their parents, the childcare role may also be taken on by the child's extended family. . If a parent or extended family is unable nable to care for the children, orphanages and foster homes are a way of providing for children's care, housing, and nd schooling. The two main types of child care options for employed parents needing childcare are centre centrebased care (including creches, daycare, daycare and preschools) and home-based based care (also known as nanny or family daycare). As well as these licensed option's parents may also choose to find their own caregiver or arrange childcare exchanges/swaps with another family.[2]
Center-based care
Commercial care centers also known as daycares are open for set hours, and provide a standardized and regulated system of care for children. Parents may choose from a commercial care center close to their work, and some companies offer care at their facilities. Active children may thrive in the educational activities provided by a quality commercial care center, but according to the National Center for Early Development and Learning, children from low quality centers may be significantly less advanced in terms of vocabulary and reading skills.[1] Classes are usually largest in this type of care, ratios of children to adult caregivers will vary according to state licensing requirements. Some positives of commercial care are children gain independence, academic achievement and socialization.[7] Pre-school is often the term used to refer to child care centers that care primarily for 3 and 4year old children. Preschool can be based in a center, family child care home or a public school. Head Start is a federally funded program for low income children ages 3 and 4 and their families. Similarly Early Head Start serves low income children birth to 3 years of age.[8] The cost for the Head Start program is estimated at $9,000 per child. Head Start program provides federal grants directly to local agencies to provide comprehensive child development services for low-income children and families. Today, Head Start serves more than one million low-income children. Head Start programs aim to promote school readiness by enhancing the social and cognitive development of children through the provision of educational, health, nutritional, social and other services to enrolled children and families.[9] Infants may also be cared for in infant and child care centers. Resources for Infant Educarers is a non-profit world-wide organization, founded by the late Magda Gerber, a specialist in Infant Care. Another method of child care is for before and/or after school: the YMCA program. There are buses that bring the child to the location. YMCA website claims that its programs are staffed with people who understand the cognitive, physical and social development of kids, the need children have to feel connected and supported in trying new things, and the caring and reinforcement parents and families need to help each other. The YMCA aims to enable preschoolers to experience early literacy and learn about their world, and school-age kids make friends, learn new skills and do homework.[10] Regardless of type of care chosen, a quality care provider should provide children with (a) light, bright and clean areas to play as well as separate sleeping and eating areas and (b) be the kind of person you can have confidence in leaving your child with.[11] Most western countries also have compulsory education during which the great majority of children are at school starting from five or six years of age. The school will act in loco parentis meaning "in lieu of parent supervision". In many locales, government is responsible for monitoring the quality of care. For instance, in Scotland Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Education is responsible for improving care and education for children from birth to eighteen. This is implemented by inspections carried out by HMIE itself or by other members of inspection and review teams. Inspection reports include feedback from staff and parents as well as the inspectors, aiming to provide parents and carers information to help them decide whether a particular child care setting is providing good quality child care and meeting government standards.[12]
Informal care
Informal childcare is a variation of childcare that utilizes family members as a childcare system, for example grandparents and siblings. Informal childcare is an especially inexpensive form of childcare, and is utilized typically by those who are considered poor. Parents may need to utilize informal care for a variety of reasons. Typically informal childcare is necessary for families who do not have enough funds to finance placing their children in a more expensive child care facility. Those low income families are also more apt to work longer hours on an irregular and inflexible schedule, which ultimately makes using a childcare facility that has regular business hours unlikely. A study done by Roberta Iversen and Annie Armstrong explains that due to long and irregular working hours, sometimes including evenings and weekends, poor parents are more likely to utilize informal childcare.[13] Unlike those children who receive centre-based or home based childcare, those children who receive informal childcare do not receive the same educational preparation and school readiness that centre-based and home based children receive. In his book Social Inequality and Social Stratification in US Society, sociologist Christopher Doob finds that poor children are less likely to attend the centre-based and home based childcare programs, which Doob finds that informal care thus results in the less developed school-related skills children need. Doob concludes that due to a lack of financial capital, poor families are thus subject to substandard amounts of human capital, which results in lower quality childcare programs, and ultimately leaves children at a cognitive disadvantage.[14]
England
In England, childcare is inspected and regulated by OFSTED (previously this was administered by Local Authority Social Services). Care for children under five is split into Childcare on Domestic Premises which is Childminding and Daycare. In the UK being a Childminder is a protected title and can only be used by registered professionals. Registered Childminders are trained, insured and qualified in Paediatric First Aid. They comply/administer/work with The Early Years Foundation Stage EYFS and have the same responsibilities for education as nurseries and reception classes. They generally work from their own homes and are always self-employed setting their own terms and conditions. The basic numbers of children that childminders can care for is 6 children under 8 years of age; of these children, 3 may be under 5 and of these 1 may be under 1. These numbers include the childminders own children (although the childminders children will not be included in the childminding Certificate). Some childminders work with either childminding assistants or with co-childminders, which often increases the number of children that can be cared for and individual childminders can request a variation which may increase the children that they care for particularly for continuity of care or for twins. There is a professional body The National Childminding Association NCMA which Promotes and supports quality childminding expertise and provides information for Childminders and parents.
The first few years of a child's life are important to form a basis for good education, morality, self-discipline and social integration. Consistency of approach, skills and qualifications of careers have been shown in many studies to improve the chances of a child reaching his or her full potential. ChildForum provides the following practical advice for parents when making their childcare programme decision: (1) Do not make a final decision too quickly. You may get a misleading impression if you base your decision on what the advertisement or the brochures say, or what you are told on the phone. (2) Have a trial period. If you are considering enrolling at a centre or home-based service have some short visits with your child before officially starting and stay with your child to observe. Also have some spontaneous/unscheduled visits, We were just passing and thought we would pop in to say hi. (3) If you are employing a nanny or caregiver in your own home ask the person to come for an hour or two over three to five days or to do some childcare so you can get a feel for if this person is a good fit for your child and for you. (4) If the childcare arrangement does not live up to your expectations or if you find it does not work out as well you had expected do not feel embarrassed or shy about withdrawing your child or asking for a change. If you think your child may be experiencing harm or is at risk discontinue using the childcare immediately. Put your child first and before any personal obligations to the teachers, nanny, or service.[16] The choice of childcare can be extremely difficult, even traumatic for parents. Social scientists have recently started drawing on popular folktales such as urban legends in order to uncover some of the complex socio-psychological elements in the decision, which is often more protracted and involved for middle-class parents.[17] Here it is also possible to see the influence of older story-telling elements such as Grimm's Fairy Tales where children learn about the dangers of allowing strangers into the home. For example, a recent study in Australia[18] concluded that centers run by corporate chains provided the lowest quality care when compared to community-based providers and independent private centers.
Studies have been done to get an annual salary estimate for a female caregiver. One reputable survey suggested that the value of a female female caregivers work would be $117,867 per year.[20] The reason for the high salary is because mothers typically perform about 10 different job functions throughout the week. These job functions functions can include: cooking, cleaning, driving, and laundry among other duties. A nanny wouldnt make nearly as much money, but they would be putting in fewer hours and performing fewer duties. It is important to assess the value of caregivers because they they are what truly make society function,[21] and often their work is under under-appreciated. appreciated. They prepare the next generation for school, work, and decision-making. making. A childs entire future l largely argely depends on how he/she was nurtured. Not only does the child depend on this care, but the schools and employers also depend on the childcare. The government also benefits because these children will eventually become taxpayers, congressmen, and voters. voters. Eventually, they will be the ones running the country. The value of unpaid childcare is also an important figure in various legal entities. Expert witnesses (most often economists) are occasionally brought into court cases to give estimates on the value of unpaid labor. By giving estimation, the plaintiff or defendant can be fairly compensated for their labor.
Learning stories
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Find sources: "Child care" news books scholar JSTOR free images (September 2011)
Learning Stories are documents that are used by Carers and educators in childcare settings. They use a story- telling format instead of a traditional observation report to document the different ways that young children learn, and capture the moment in greater detail and provide parents with a greater insight into the events that occur in their childs time in childcare. What they include
Story of the childs progress Pictures of the experiences (Optional) The childs strengths, interests and needs Space for parent feedback[22]
History
First child care in human prehistory
According to Chris Knight, , the first humans were few; then the population "exploded .... Population expansion on such a scale is inconsistent with female tolerance tolerance of infanticide, harassment, or the heavy costs to mothers of male philandering and double standards. If unusually large numbers of unusually large-brained large brained offspring were being successfully raised to maturity, the quality of childcare must have been exceptional. exceptional. We know what the optimal
solution would have been. There can be no doubt that mothers would have done best by ... taking advantage of every available childcare resource."[23]
Plato
Plato, according to Elaine Hoffman Baruch, around 394 B.C., argued that a system of child care would free women to participate in society.[24]
See also
Day care Corporate child care Nanny Babysitting Parental leave Magda Gerber Au pair Nursery school Kindergarten Forest kindergarten Playwork Child development Forgotten baby syndrome Work-family balance in the United States
Notes
1. ^ Olson, Lynn (1/10/02). "Starting Early". Education Week 21 (17): 1011. "According to the 2002 Quality Counts survey conducted by Education Week, approximately six out of every ten children, or almost 12 million children, age five and younger, are being jointly cared for by parents and early childhood educators, relatives, or other child-care providers" 2. ^ ChildForum Childcare Information http://www.childforum.com/options-adifferences-between-ece-programmes/73-private-childcare-arrangements-makingyour-own-and-what-is-involved.html 3. ^ "Daycare vs. Nannycare: The Pros and Cons". Parents With Nannies, Inc. Retrieved 24 November 2012. 4. ^ National Association of Family Child Care http://www.nafcc.org/include/default.asp 5. ^ "What is Family Child Care". National Association for Family Child Care. Retrieved 24 November 2012. 6. ^ "Opening a Family Child Care Home". Maryland State Department of Education. Retrieved 24 November 2012. 7. ^ Cerbasi, Jennifer. "The Pros and Cons of Daycare". FOX News Network. Retrieved 24 November 2012. 8. ^ Office of Head Start http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ohs/about/index.html#prog_desc 9. ^ "Head Start and Early Head Start". Children's Defense Fund. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
10. ^ "Child Care". YMCA of the USA. Retrieved 24 November 2012. 11. ^ ChildForum list of childcare caregiver qualities and characteristics http://www.childforum.com/options-a-differences-between-ece-programmes/28-whoyou-want-to-leave-your-baby-or-child-with.html 12. ^ "Childproof Your Home!". VeryTogether.com. 3 April 2009. Retrieved 20 May 2009. 13. ^ Iversen, Roberta Rehner, and Annie Laurie Armstrong. 2006. Jobs Aren't Enough: Toward a New Economic Mobility for Low-Income Families. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. 14. ^ Doob, Christopher B. 2013. Social Inequality and Social Stratification in US Society. Upper Saddle River, NJ:Pearson. 227-253. 15. ^ Daycare - Daycares Don't Care, How Can a Daycare Love? 16. ^ http://www.childforum.com/childcare.html 17. ^ Robin Croft (2006), Folklore, families and fear: understanding consumption decisions through the oral tradition, Journal of Marketing Management, 22:9/10, pp1053-1076, ISSN 0267-257X 18. ^ 2006, Rush, The Australia Institute http://www.tai.org.au/documents/downloads/DP84.pdf 19. ^ Folbre, Nancy. The Invisible Heart: Economics and Family Values. New York: New, 2001 20. ^ "Mom Salary Wizard?2010. Mother's Day Paycheck for Mom's Job." Web. <http://swz.salary.com/momsalarywizard/htmls/mswl_momcenter.html> 21. ^ Folbre, Nancy. "Valuing Unpaid Work Matters, Especially for the Poor NYTimes.com." The Economy and the Economics of Everyday Life - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com. Web. <http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/21/valuingunpaid-work-matters-especially-for-the-poor/>. 22. ^ Kearns, K, 2010. Birth to Big School. 2nd ed. Frenchs Forest, NSW: Pearson Australia." Kate Ryan. 2006. Family Daycare Australia. [ONLINE] Available at: http://familydaycare.com.au/forms/feature%2041%20-%20Learning%20Stories.pdf. [Accessed 20 May 11]. 23. ^ Knight, Chris, Early Human Kinship was Matrilineal, in Allen, Nicholas J., Hillary Callan, Robin Dunbar, & Wendy James, eds., Early Human Kinship: From Sex to Social Reproduction (Malden, Mass.: Blackwell Publishing, 2008 (ISBN 978-1-40517901-0)), pp. 81-82 (author prof. anthropology, Univ. of East London). 24. ^ Schnpflug, Karin, Feminism, Economics and Utopia: Time Travelling Through Paradigms (Oxon/London: Routledge, 2008 (ISBN13 978-0-415-41784-6)), pp. 159 160 (author economist, Austrian Ministry of Finance, & lecturer, Univ. of Vienna), citing Rohrlich, R. & Elaine Hoffman Baruch, Women in Search of Utopia: Mavericks and Mythmakers (N.Y.: Schocken Books, 1984), and Plato, The Republic (ca. 394 B.C.).