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Quality Child Care Makes A DifferenceParents know that the person who cares for their child many hours a week makes a difference in their child's life and well-being. Both common sense and research tell us that children's brains are growing most quickly during their first years of life, and that their experiences during these critical early years lay the foundation for the rest of their lives. As a result, child care affects the way that children think, learn, and behave. Studies repeatedly have shown that high-quality child care - care that provides a loving, safe, stable and age-appropriate stimulating environment - helps children enter school ready to learn. Studies have shown that high-quality care has an even greater impact on children from families that earn low incomes. And, that poor-quality care - which is too often not stimulating, uncaring, and even unsafe - deprives children of the strong start they need. Studies repeatedly have shown that good quality child care - care that provides a loving, safe, stable and age-appropriate stimulating environment - helps children enter school ready to learn. Studies have shown that high quality care has an even greater impact on low-income children. And , that poor quality care - which is too often unstimulating, uncaring, and even unsafe - deprives children of the strong start they need. High quality care improves child outcomes.
Much of the child care in the United States is not high-quality.
The lack of high-quality care is related to the lack of school readiness.
1 Ellen S. Peisner-Feinberg, Margaret R. Burchinal, Richard M. Clifford, Mary L. Culkin, Carollee Howes, Sharon Lynn Kagan, Noreen Yazejian, Patricia Byler, Jean Rustici, and Janice Zelazo, The Children of the Cost, Quality, and Outcomes Study Go To School (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina, 1999). 2Lynn A. Karoly, Peter W. Greenwood, Susan S. Everingham, Jill Hoube, M. Rebecca Kilburn, C. Peter Rydell, Matthew Sanders, and James Chiesa, Investing in Our Children: What We Know and Don't Know about the Costs and Benefits of Early Childhood Interventions (Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 1998). 3 Testimony by Deborah Phillips before the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, March 1, 1995. 4National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies. Parents' Perceptions of Child Care in the United States: NACCRRA's National Parent Poll, May 2006. 5National Child Care Information Center. Threshold of Licensed Family Child Care. April 2006. (http://nccic.acf.hhs.gov/pubs/cclicensingreq/threshold.html). 6National Child Care Information Center. Child Care Licensing Requirements: Minimum Early Childhood Education (ECE) Preservice Qualifications, Orientation /Initial Licensure, and Annual Ongoing Training Hours for Family Child Care Providers, April 2006. (http://nccic.acf.hhs.gov/pubs/cclicensingreq/cclr-famcare.html). 7National Child Care Information Center. Center Child Care Licensing Requirements. November 2005. 8This number reflects the number of accredited programs as of December, 2004 provided by the National Association for the Education of Young Children. 9 S.E. Rimm-Kaufman, R.C. Pianta, and M.J. Cox, Early Childhood Research Quarterly, Vol. 15, No. 2, 2000, cited in Early Education Clearinghouse, Kindergarten Teachers Perceive Difficulty in Transitions to School, Facts in Action, Associated Day Care Services, November 2000. 10U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. 2005 Nation's Report Card. National Assessment of Educational Progress, Reading. (http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/reading). |
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