Choosing Infant Care
Choosing Childcare for Your Baby
When deciding on childcare for their infants, many parents struggle with questions about quality. Recent childcare research shows that the setting (in-home, family or center) matters less than what happens within that setting. Babies need to be able to form a trusting relationship with providers that allows an emotional bond to form.
Low provider-to-child ratios are key. Equally important are questions on what staff salaries and benefits are like. Low pay is responsible for rampant turnover within the childcare industry, thus making it harder for your baby to build a comfortable bond with his or her caregiver(s).
Here are some tips to keep in mind when investigating childcare options for your baby:
• Visit the daycare site before
enrolling your child. Visit at times when you can
observe the interactions of children with each other and with
adults.
• Spend some time observing
the infant room.
Visit several times to judge how caregivers respond to tears or times of
stress.
• See if infants are allowed
to have their naps when it feels right for them. Unlike older children, babies
have a harder time being treated as part of a group and need to follow their own
inner schedules.
• Make sure providers are
interacting with babies. According to a study by the
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, “the amount of
language that is directed at the child in childcare is an important component of
quality provider-child interaction.”
• Ask how care providers
handle babies’ special needs, such as food allergies or
attachment to a pacifier.
• Check the qualifications and
credentials of the caregivers. Degrees in early childhood
education and accreditation from the National Association for Family Child Care
and the National Association for the Education of Young Children provide good
starting points.
• Get names of parents whose
children have attended or are attending and call
them.
Resources
National Association for the
Education of Young Children,
Washington, D.C.; 202-232-8777; www.naeyc.org. Offers a listing of accredited
centers by state and zip code.
National Association for
Family Child Care,
Des Moines, Iowa; 800-359-3817; www.nafcc.org. Offers information on accredited
family-care providers.
For more information about quality preschool programs in our area contact the Office for Young Children at (517) 887-4319 or vist the OYC website: www.ingham.org/hd/oyc/
-- Furnished by the Ingham Great Start Collaborative