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2. Types of Early Childhood Programs. Key Concepts. There are many types of child care programs, all of which have advantages and disadvantages. Child care programs can have public, private, or employer sponsorship.
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2 Types of Early Childhood Programs
Key Concepts • There are many types of child care programs, all of which have advantages and disadvantages. • Child care programs can have public, private, or employer sponsorship. • Licensing and accreditation are important in the selection of child care programs.
Objectives • List and describe the various types of early childhood programs available to parents and their children. • Assess the advantages and disadvantages of each type of program. • Name the three types of center sponsorship. continued
Objectives • Explain steps families may take in choosing quality child care. • List indications of quality in early childhood programs. • Recognize licensing rules and regulations that help keep centers safe. • List the components of center accreditation.
Family Child Care Homes • Family child care homes provide child care by people other than a relative or parent • Often in private neighborhood homes • Some states require licensing • May attend up to 12 hours a day
Child Care Centers • Child care centers are the most popular type of service • Programs based on provider skills and state licensing requirements • Some offer whole child curriculum • Some offer custodial care
Montessori Schools • Montessori schools focus on self-education in a prescribed sequence • The Montessori approach stresses • independence with little help from teachers • practical life experiences • sensory training mastered before academics are introduced
Head Start • The Head Start program was designed by the federal government in the 1960s to overcome the negative effects of poverty on young children • Provides child care for infants, toddlers, and four- to five-year-olds from low-income families • May be full- or part-time; in a center or home • Provides medical and social services continued
Head Start • Education • Curriculum is designed to build self-esteem that will lead to future success • Family involvement is key • Curiosity • Self-confidence • Self-discipline continued
Head Start • Nutrition • One snack and one hot meal every day • Health services provided • Dental • Medical including immunizations • Mental health continued
Head Start • Parental involvement • Recruiting new children • Assisting in the center • Taking part in policy meetings
Did You Know? Head Start is administered under the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. Two-thirds of the nearly 1,335,600 individuals who volunteer are parents.
Kindergarten • Kindergarten is part of most private and public school systems • Schedules include • half-day • full-day • full-day/alternating day sessions continued
Kindergarten • Program goals and objectives include • respect for the contributions, property, and rights of other children • development of positive feelings about school • development of positive self-concept • growth in language, social, physical, and creative skills continued
Kindergarten • Program goals and objectives include • achievement of problem-solving and cognitive skills • development of independence, shown by working alone on a task or developing self-help skills • development of interpersonal skills • appreciation of objects of beauty continued
Kindergarten • Curriculum may vary from school to school • It can include • preacademic skills • social development • creative activities
School-Age Care • Children from ages 5 to 10 most often attend school-age child care programs • Before- and after-school care • Sponsored by schools, religious organizations, or child care centers • Programs supplement regular classes continued
School-Age Care • Checking-in-services are provided for parents of older children • Call the home and check whether the child has arrived safely
Parent Cooperatives • Parent cooperatives allow parents to • prepare budgets • hire teachers • set program policies and goals • assist in the classroom • utilize full- or half-days • Developmental experiences for adults as well as children continued
Parent Cooperatives • Advantages • Teachers can devote more time to curriculum, while parents take care of the administrative activities • Special relationship between parents and teachers • Disadvantages • Teachers have less control; rules set by parents continued
Parent Cooperatives • Sessions • Two to three hours per day • Two to five days a week • Fees • Less than other programs • Paid head teacher, with parents performing all additional duties
Laboratory Schools • Laboratory schools are university- and college-affiliated programs • Train future teachers • Serve as a study group for research • Have highly qualified staff • Have well-planned curriculum • Use excellent equipment
High School Child Care Programs • High school child care programs train future child care professionals • Laboratory facilities for students to work with preschoolers while supervised by a teacher • Operate two or three days a week • Curriculum is planned by high school students • Students observe and work directly with children
Sponsorship of Early Childhood Centers • Public, private, or employer-sponsored child care centers • Public sponsorships include • Head Start • public university child care centers • publically funded preschools, laboratory schools, and high school child care programs continued
Sponsorship of Early Childhood Centers • Private sponsorships may be operated by • houses of worship • hospitals • charitable organizations • child care corporations (national chains) • Employer sponsorships offer • child care sponsored on-site or nearby for employees’ children
Universal Pre-Kindergarten • Universal pre-kindergarten (UPK) is a state-sponsored program for three- and four-year-olds • High-quality, literary-rich environment • Eagerness to learn in kindergarten • Early learning experiences for disadvantaged children
Selecting a Child Care Program • Factors to consider • Promotes children’s safety and comfort • Quality of program, cost, and location • Promotes all areas of child development • NAEYC recommended • Staff training, experience, and turnover ratio • Adult-child ratio and group size • Condition of facilities
Search child care referral agency online/phonebook friends and relatives Investigate calling visiting Choose The Selection Process
Discuss • If you were selecting a child care program for your child, what are some other factors that you would consider?
Licensing Rules and Regulations • Licensing rules and regulations • affect the safety and health of the children • protect parents, employers, and employees • A child care license is a state-provided certificate granting permission to operate • a child care center • family child care home
Center Accreditation • The best indicator of high-quality early care and education is being accredited by the National Academy of Early Childhood Programs • Improves the quality of programs • Helps parents find high-quality child care • Assures parents their children are receiving quality care
Discuss • What are the requirements to receive accreditation for a child care program in your state?
Brainstorm • What are some advantages and disadvantages of these child care programs?
Review • List five types of child care programs. • What are the three types of sponsorships for child care programs? • True or false. Licensing and accreditation are not important in the selection of child care programs.
Glossary • accredited. Having a certification that states a set of standards has been met. • checking-in services. Program assigning workers to call children in self-care to make sure there are no problems.
Glossary • child care centers. Full-day child care facilities that focus on basic nutritional, social, emotional, intellectual, and physical needs. • child care license. A state-provided certificate granting permission to open and operate a child care center or family child care home.
Glossary • custodial care. Type of child care that focuses primarily on meeting the child’s physical needs. • family child care home. Child care that is provided in a private home.
Glossary • Head Start. A program developed by the federal government to strengthen the academic skills of children from low-income homes, and designed mainly for four- and five-year-olds.
Glossary • laboratory schools. Schools located on a postsecondary or college campus with a primary purpose of training future teachers and serving as a study group for research. • licensing rules and regulations. Standards set to ensure that uniform and safe practices are followed.
Glossary • Montessori approach. Schools provide children freedom within limits by a rather structured approach, and a fixed method in which materials are presented. • parent cooperatives. Child care programs that are formed and run by parents who wish to take part in their children’s preschool experience.
Glossary • school-age child care programs. Programs often sponsored by schools, houses of worship, or child care centers that provide care for children before and/or after school.
Glossary • universal pre-kindergarten (UPK). A state-sponsored program designed to introduce three- and four-year-old children to a literary-rich environment. The goal is to enable every child with skills needed to succeed in school.