There are eight million preschoolers whose mothers now work, most of
them because of economic necessity. For these mothers the question is
not whether to use daycare, but how to choose among the available
options in a way that is best for the child. These are just the
questions taken up in Daycare, a brief and readable summary of the
best information modern “baby science” has to offer about how
daycare affects young children and how to tell the difference between
daycare that helps and daycare that hurts. On the basis of her own
research and a complete review of the most recent daycare studies,
Alison Clarke-Stewart concludes that good daycare definitely does not
impair the child's development either emotionally or intellectually.
Fears that daycare children will fail to develop proper parental
attachments and will cling instead to their peers are unfounded; so
too are fears that mental growth will be slowed. In fact, there is
some evidence that social and intellectual development can be
facilitated in good daycare environments. The real question is just
what these environments are made of, and here Daycare provides a
complete discussion of the necessary ingredients, including a
checklist that parents can use to make their own evaluation of any
daycare arrangement. This is a book that covers all the practical
problems daycare parents must face and suggests ways to solve them
that are based not on psychological theory or political conviction but
on the facts as we now know them.
Les mer
Revised Edition
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674271517
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter