32
Child, Family, Child, Family, School, School, and Community and Community S S ocialization and Support 6 ocialization and Support 6 th th ed. ed. Chapter Five Chapter Five ECOLOGY OF CHILDCARE ECOLOGY OF CHILDCARE

Child, Family, School, and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th ed

  • Upload
    inga

  • View
    23

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Child, Family, School, and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th ed. Chapter Five ECOLOGY OF CHILDCARE. CHILDCARE What is quality care?. The National Day Care Study has found three predictors of positive classroom dynamics and child outcomes: Size of the overall group - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

Child, Family, School, Child, Family, School, and Communityand Community

SSocialization and Support 6ocialization and Support 6thth ed. ed.

Chapter FiveChapter FiveECOLOGY OF CHILDCAREECOLOGY OF CHILDCARE

Page 2: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

The National Day Care Study has found three predictors of positive classroom dynamics and child outcomes:

• Size of the overall group

• Caregiver-child ratios

• Specialized training of caregivers in child development or early childhood education

CHILDCAREWhat is quality care?

Page 3: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCAREWhat is quality care?

Advocacy for quality care

• National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) has its own accreditation standards to promote developmentally appropriate practice.

• A federal child-care bill was passed in 1990, which include a Childcare and Development Block Grant.

• The Family and Medical Leave Act was passed in 1993.

Page 4: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCAREWhat is quality care?

Accreditation of child care programs• Voluntary systems exist nationally to establish higher- quality standards than are required by law.

• The standard criteria addresses staff qualifications and training, administration and staffing patterns, the physical environment, health and safety issues, and nutrition and food service.

• In 1998, the National Association for Family Day Care (now the National Association for Family Child Care) began a program for voluntary accreditation for in-home childcare services.   

Page 5: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCARE Macrosystem influences on

child careGenerally child care and educational practices have been affected by four distinct macrosystems:

• Political Ideology• Culture/Ethnicity• Economics• Science/Technology

Page 6: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCARE Macrosystem influences on

child care (cont’d)

• The first day nurseries were established to cope with the children of masses of immigrants to the United States during the mid-nineteenth century.

• The first cooperative nursery school was inaugurated at the University of Chicago in 1915.

Page 7: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCARE Macrosystem influences on

child care (cont’d)

• In 1964, the Economic Opportunity Act was passed to provide educational and social opportunities for children from low-income families.

• The political activism in the 1960s provided part of the rationale for early intervention.

• President George Bush outlined his plan for educational reform in his “No Child Left Behind” Act.

Page 8: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCAREChronosystem influences on

child careNineteenth century

• Industrialization and a flood of immigrants led to the need for childcare.

• Mrs. Joseph Hale opened the first day nursery for children of seamen’s working wives and widows.

Page 9: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCAREChronosystem influences on

child careTwentieth century

• Most childcare could be classified as custodial.

•   President Franklin Roosevelt made public funds available for childcare as part of the Works Project Administration (WPA). These funds were stopped when the WPA was no longer in force.

Page 10: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCAREChronosystem influences on

child care (cont’d)

Twentieth century• Federal funds, made available through the Lantham Act of 1942, made child care available to women working in the war effort.

• After the Lantham Act was discontinued, childcare facilities continued to exist as many women continued to work.

Page 11: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILDCAREChronosystem influences on

child care (cont’d)

Twentieth century Philosophy of childcare changed from a support service for needy families to a developmental service for all children.

The 1971 White House Conference announces the need for quality care as the most serious problem for families.

Page 12: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CARE

Child care and psychological development

Rene Spitz compared:

Infants raised by caregivers

Infants raised by their mothers exhibited normal development whereas the other infants were delayed developmentally.

Infants raised by their incarcerated mothers.

TO

Page 13: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CARE

Child care and psychological development (cont’d)

John Bowlby:

ANY break in the early mother-child relationship could have detrimental effects for

the child.

Page 14: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CARE

Child care and psychological development (cont’d)

Harold Skeels: • the degree and nurturance received (NOT the caregiver) is the most important determinant of children’s development.

• infants who are initially deprived can grow up normally IF intervention provided by a caring, nurturing person.

Page 15: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CARE

Child care and psychological development (cont’d)

Researchers say : Children form can SECONDARY

attachments to caregivers if caregiver provides care for a substantial amount of time.

Page 16: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CARE

Child care and psychological development (cont’d)

Jay Belsky says: Infants under age 1 receiving non-maternal

care 20+ hours a week are at a greater risk of developing insecure relationships with their mothers.

Phillips and Clarke-Stewart says:Children in full-time day care may have different

coping styles and traditional assessments of attachment may not be adequate for children reared in diverse environments.

Page 17: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CARE

Child care and psychological development (cont’d)

Michael Lamb:

• Day care does not affect mother-child attachment.

• Adverse effects = poor-quality day care + insensitive and unresponsive maternal behavior.

Page 18: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CARE

Child care and social development

• Numerous studies show children experienced in childcare programs are more socially competent than children not experienced.

• Non-childcare children are typically more aggressive and hostile toward others.

Page 19: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CORRELATES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD CAREChild care and cognitive developmentResearch shows:

• A positive relationship between attendance in quality day care and cognitive development.

• Child care effects on cognitive development depend on many factors (i.e. home life)

Page 20: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

MESOSYSTEM INFLUENCES ON CHILDCARE

Child Care and the School and Community

Ways to Increase Childcare Options:

• Extend services in elementary school to children under age 5 and to extend the class hours.

• Cooperative community ventures with urban public school districts and the YMCA.

Page 21: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

MESOSYSTEM INFLUENCES ON CHILDCARE

Child care and the school and community(cont’d)

• Childcare affects not only children and families, but communities as well.

• The quality of family life in communities is often elevated by the provision of childcare.

• Childcare affects the economics of communities in that it enables adults to work.

Page 22: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

MESOSYSTEM INFLUENCES ON CHILDCARE

Child care and the government business

• Current U.S. policy: government pays for disadvantaged families’ childcare and grants tax credits to other families.

• Perry Preschool research: children who attended a quality preschool significantly out-performed those who did not.

Page 23: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

MESOSYSTEM INFLUENCES ON CHILDCARE

Child care and the government business(cont’d)

• The federal government plans to expand existing programs (Head Start).

• Some businesses provide child care assistance for employees:

• parental leaves

• flexible scheduling

• community resources

• on-site child care

• start-up costs to community childcare centers

• financial assistance to pay for child care

Page 24: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILD CARE AND SOCIALIZATION

There are different types of childcare:

• In-home care• Family day care• Center-based care

Page 25: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILD CARE AND SOCIALIZATION

Socialization effects of different preschool programs

Cognitively-oriented curriculum:

• translates Jean Piaget’s theory of cognitive

development into an educational program

• learner-directed

Page 26: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILD CARE AND SOCIALIZATION

Socialization effects of different preschool programs(cont’d)

Direct-instruction curriculum:

• based on B.F. Skinner’s philosophy

• aims to enhance disadvantaged children’s

learning experiences through behavior

modification and controlled skill learning

• teacher-directed

Page 27: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILD CARE AND SOCIALIZATION

Socialization effects of different preschool programs(cont’d)

Montessori curriculum:

• child should be treated as an individual

• children naturally absorb knowledge during

“sensitive periods.”

• learner-directed

Page 28: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILD CARE AND SOCIALIZATION

Socialization effects of different preschool programs(cont’d)

Developmental interaction curriculum:

• focuses on the development of self-confidence and

productivity

• individualized in relation to each child’s stage of

development.

• learning organized around child’s own experiences

• learner-directed

Page 29: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

CHILD CARE AND SOCIALIZATION

Socialization effects of child care ideologies

Cultural and economic background influences child care beliefs

People employ caregivers outside the family whose child care ideologies generally match theirs

Page 30: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

DEVELOPMENTALLY APPROPRIATE CAREGIVING

Collaborative Caregiving

• Professionals who care for infants and children MUST collaborate with families regarding ideologies and socialization goals.

• Diversity in socialization can be observed in communication styles with infants.

Page 31: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

DEVELOPMENTALLY APPROPRIATE CAREGIVING

Collaborative Caregiving

Experts suggest:

Parents and non-parental caregivers set-aside “transition time” when children enter a childcare center.

Page 32: Child, Family, School,   and Community S ocialization and Support 6 th  ed

DEVELOPMENTALLY APPROPRIATE CAREGIVING

Caregivers and child protection

• Caregivers MUST report suspected maltreatment under the law, Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act

• There are physical and behavioral indicators of maltreatment