Title: Charting Progress for Babies in Child Care
1Charting Progress for Babies in Child Care
- NAEYC Annual Conference
- Chicago, Illinois
- November 8, 2007
Rachel Schumacher Center for Law and Social Polic
y (CLASP)
Anne Goldstein Consultant, ZERO TO THREE
2Session Overview
- Where are babies and what are their early care
and education needs?
- Charting Progress for Babies in Child Care
- Project overview
- Policy framework
- Successes and lessons in promoting high quality
care for babies in Michigan and Ohio
- Discussion
3Where are Babies?
Primary child care arrangements for children
birth to 3
with employed mothers
Source Urban Institute, 2002 National Survey of
Americas Families.
4Babies in Child Care Need
- Warm, nurturing caregivers they can trust to care
for them as they grow.
- When relationships are nurturing,
- individualized, responsive, and predictable,
they increase the odds of desirable
outcomesbuilding healthy brain architecture that
provides a strong foundation for learning,
behavior, and health. The Science of Early
Childhood Development. National Scientific
Council on the Developing Child. 2007 - Infants with secure attachment relationships with
their caregivers are more likely to play,
explore, and interact with adults in their child
care setting.Raikes, Helen. A Secure Base for
Babies Applying Attachment Theory Concepts to
the Infant Care Setting. Young Children.
1996.
5Connecting Research to Policy
- Research shows that factors that promote strong,
secure relationships and high-quality
interactions between caregiver and child are
- Low staff-child ratios
- Well-trained caregivers
- Adequate compensation
- Good relationships with parents/involvement
- Cohen, Julie, Onunaku, Ngozi, Clothier,
Steffanie, and Poppe, Julie. Helping
Young Children Succeed Strategies to
promote Early Childhood Social and Emotional
Development. 2005. - Relationships cannot be legislated, but policies
to better support them can through
- Early care and education policy
- Supportive governance and finance systems
6Charting Progress for Babies in Child Care
Project
- Identify a set of state policy recommendations to
increase the odds that infants and toddlers
experience positive early learning experiences
that include warm, responsive, and nurturing
interactions with their non-parental caregivers
in child care settings. - Licensing
- Subsidy
- Quality Enhancement
- Steps
- Solicit input from the field
- Develop recommendations and menus of policies to
help states move forward
- Gather information on developing state policies
and post online
- Provide information and assistance to state
leaders
7Charting Progress for Babies in Child Care
Policy Framework
- State policies can promote the quality and
continuity of early childhood experiences and
positively impact the healthy growth and
development of babies and toddlers in child
care. - Four principles of what babies and families need
- Research-based recommendations supporting
principles
- Menu of policies for states to move toward the
recommendations
8Multi-Level FrameworkWhat Does it Look Like?
- First Level Key Principles
- Second Level Recommendations
- Third Level Menu of policies
-
9Four Key Principles Set the Foundationfor the
Policy Framework
10Principle Babies in child care need nurturing,
responsive providers and caregivers they can
trust to care for them as they grow and learn.
- States should
- Establish what providers and caregivers should
know to care for babies and toddlers.
- Ensure that providers and caregivers for babies
and toddlers have access to education, training,
and support.
- Promote competitive compensation and benefits for
infant and toddler providers.
- Recruit and maintain diverse and culturally
sensitive infant and toddler providers and
caregivers.
- Support continuous relationships between
providers and children, birth-three.
11Principle Babies in child care need healthy and
safe environments in which to explore and learn.
- States should
- Ensure babies and toddlers in centers are in
small groups with sufficient numbers of adults.
- Ensure babies and toddlers in family child care
are in small groups with sufficient numbers of
adults.
- Require training and provide supports on health
and safety issues critical for babies and
toddlers.
- Monitor and provide technical assistance to
infant and toddler providers.
12Principle Babies in child care need parents,
providers and caregivers supported and linked to
community resources.
- States should
- Partner with parents of babies and toddlers in
child care.
- Screen babies and toddlers in child care for
health and developmental delays.
- Link necessary services for vulnerable babies and
toddlers to child care settings.
13Principle Families need access to quality
options for the care of their babies and toddlers.
- States should
- Build the supply of high quality infant and
toddler child care.
- Promote stable, quality care for babies and
toddlers through subsidy policy.
- Provide culturally and linguistically appropriate
information on choosing infant and toddler child
care.
14Phase Two of Charting Progress
- Post Policy Framework online and update as
needed
- Gather and post state policies and links (with
your help!)
- Select key recommendations for additional
research and develop in-depth profiles of state
efforts
- Help state leaders use the framework and track
their own progress
- Develop technology capacity for a dynamic,
user-friendly, searchable website and online
community
15Thank You
16Additional Resources from CLASP
Challenges of Change Learning from the Child Ca
re and Early Education Experiences of Immigrant
Families
Starting Off Right Promoting Child Development fr
om Birth in State Early Care and Education Initi
atives
Coming Soon Building on the Promise St
ate Initiatives to Expand Access to Early Head
Start for Young Children and their Families All
available at http//childcareandearlyed.clasp.org
17CLASP Starting Off Right - State Initiative
Profiles http//www.clasp.org/publications/state_
infanttoddler_profiles.htm
18ZERO TO THREE Resources
- For more information
- Go to www.zerotothree.org (click on public
policy)
- Sign up for The Baby Monitor, a bi-weekly
e-newsletter of the State Policy Network
19Contact Information
- Rachel Schumacher, Senior Fellow
- 1015 15th Street NW Suite 400
- Washington, DC 20003
- (202) 906-8005
- rschumacher_at_clasp.org
- Come see our new, improved website
- http//childcareandearlyed.clasp.org
- Anne Goldstein, Consultant,
- ZERO TO THREE
- Early Care Counts
- 297 Herndon Parkway, Suite 104
- Herndon, VA 20170
- (703) 919-4737
- agoldstein_at_earlycarecounts.org
- www.zerotothree.org/policy