If you need to
find care for your child, you usually have two choices; family
daycare or a daycare center. Family daycare is generally provided in a private home, often times
by the parent of a small child or two. A family day care home may offer
a more relaxed, home-like style of care than a center, with more
flexible schedule and a less formal relationship with parents. A daycare
center may provide a more structured environment, focusing on preparing
children for kindergarten.
Day care providers are much more than babysitters. They should
provide all the safety, warmth, and learning opportunities as a child
care center but do it in a home environment. Check your state's
regulations to find the number of children that can be cared for in a
family day care home or center.
When choosing any daycare setting, it is important to find a setting
with which you are comfortable. The provider should share your attitudes
and values about children. Plan to visit the home or center to talk and observe
them with the children.
Select a
home or center that is licensed or registered. Here's what you should be looking
for:
|
| Practical
Considerations: |
|
1. Name/and address/phone
number of home or center
2. Hours center is open
3. Fees charged
4. Ages of children licensed for
5. Care of sick children?
6. Location easy to reach? |
|
| Checklist |
|
For the following items, use a
rating of:
0 - Can't tell
1 - No, not in the home
2 - Somewhat
3 - Yes, in the home |
|
| Physical
Facility/Health, Safety |
Score |
| The home/center is reasonably clean
and orderly. |
0 1 2 3 |
| No children are seen with
soiled diapers or training pants. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Detergents, cleaners, and
medicines are in a locked cabinet. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Electrical outlets are covered
with safety caps. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Household items like knives,
scissors, curling irons are stored out of reach of children. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Toys and equipment are in good
repair with no sharp edges, splinters, or loose parts. |
0 1
2 3 |
| There is a quiet area that can
be darkened for naps with clean bedding for each child |
0 1
2 3 |
| The toileting area is easy for
the children to get to with potty chairs, safe steps, or whatever is
needed. |
0 1
2 3 |
| There is an area of the home
where children can play out of the way of other family members. |
0 1
2 3 |
| There is a fenced, outdoor
play area in which the caregiver can see all areas of the yard easily. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The home/center is warm, cheerful,
and inviting. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Caregiver Competencies |
Score |
| The caregiver spends time with
the children rather than ignoring them to carry out household duties or
talk on the telephone. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver provides
individual attention when needed. For example, an upset child is held,
talked to, etc. |
0 1
2 3 |
| You can see the caregiver
praising the children, for example, saying "You did a good job
hanging up your coat." |
0 1
2 3 |
| You can see the caregiver
communicating effectively with the children, explaining in clear steps
what she/he wants the children to do, answering children's questions
patiently, frequently bending or kneeling down to the child's level when
talking. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The children appear happy,
comfortable, and relaxed - laughing, smiling, involved in play. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The children enjoy one another
- smile at each other, hold hands, hug, help each other more than they
fight or argue. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver uses the
children's first names or nicknames when talking to or about them. |
0 1
2 3 |
| She/he does not refer to
the children by unpleasant names, such as "smarty" or
"brat" etc. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver seems warm and
affectionate with the children, smiling, cuddling, speaking pleasantly. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver encourages
children to do some things for themselves, patiently giving time, help,
and praise so that the child can learn to master the skill, such as
getting a drink, washing hands, putting away a toy. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver holds infants
when feeding them rather than propping up their bottles. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver talks to
infants, cuddles, and plays with them during the day. Infants are not
left alone for long periods. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver is a person you
would like your child to copy or imitate. In other words, children are
apt to "do as the caregiver does, more than what she/he says." |
0 1
2 3 |
| Program Materials |
Score |
| Attractive and well-written
story and picture books are available for the children. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver encourages
listening and talking through planned activities like storytelling, word
games, doll playing. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The home/center has materials for
quiet play, such as puzzles, and active play, such as riding toys. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Children can get at least some
materials for themselves, and they are encouraged to take care of the
materials and put them away when finished. |
0 1
2 3 |
| There are enough toys and
materials so that each child can play without having to wait more than a
few minutes. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver encourages both
boys and girls to play with all the materials - such as riding toys,
dress-up clothes, dolls, cars, and trucks. Caregivers do not give
children the idea that a certain activity is only for boys or only for
girls. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Children sometimes can use
creative materials, such as crayons, big blank pieces of paper rather
than coloring books, paste, clay or playdough, scissors, pencils, etc. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Three or more of the following
toys are available for the children's use: large and small riding toys,
pull toys, pounding toys, beads for stringing, puzzles, small and large
blocks, nested toys, small building toys like Tinkertoys. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Children may watch only
appropriate television programs and are not forced or encouraged to sit
in front of the TV for long periods. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver plans at least
one activity for the children each day that your child would enjoy. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Home-Childcare
Coordination |
Score |
| The caregiver can tell you
what meals and snacks will be served to the children this week. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The menus sound nutritious and
contain foods your child likes. |
0 1
2 3 |
| If you have an infant, the
caregiver refrigerates infant bottles and foods and will feed according
to your directions. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Ask what the caregiver does if
a child does not like a certain food being served to see if you agree
with his/her method. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver uses discipline
and guidance methods similar to your own and is consistent and fair with
the children. |
0 1
2 3 |
| The caregiver answers
questions in a friendly, open way. |
0 1
2 3 |
| You feel comfortable and could
expect to share concerns about your child with the caregivers. |
0 1
2 3 |
| Total Score |
__________ |
| Score Results |
|
| 100-123 points -
EXCELLENT PROGRAM, worth getting on a waiting list to enroll your child. |
| 80-100 points -
GOOD PROGRAM, worth serious consideration. |
| 60-80 points -
POSSIBLY ADEQUATE, think this over carefully though. |
| 40-60 points -
LOOK ELSEWHERE. |
| 0-40 points -
DEFINITELY OUT, probably in violation of licensing requirements. |
If you have a lot
of items on the checklist with 0 points because you were not able to
tell, then this will lower the overall score a lot. In this case, look
at how you scored the rest of the items.
If most of your other scores are "3's", then this could be a
very good program despite the fact that the total score is lower than it
should be.
Above all, trust your own judgment and feeling about a program. You know
your child best and can tell which program will be right for your
family.
|