How Child Care Centers Hold on to Teachers, How Teachers Build Lasting Careers

Demand for child care services has grown steadily over the last few decades due to demographic trends, public policies, newly discovered links between brain development and early environments, and the number of parents entering the labor market for reasons such as welfare reform. As a result, many U. S. children spend time on a regular basis each week in out-of-school time care. Despite the growing demand and the increased recognition of the importance of childhood development, the child care industry suffers from high turnover among both staff and leadership, thereby imperiling the overall quality of care provided by child care centers.


In By a Thread: How Child Care Centers Hold On to Teachers, How Teachers Build Lasting Careers, Marcy Whitebook and Laura Sakai examine how child care programs and their staff subsist in a field characterized by low pay, low status, and high turnover and what the impacts of these factors are on the quality of child care provided.


Their study is based on an in-depth survey of 75 mid-size, relatively high-quality child care centers located in an economically thriving region. They collected data on salaries, training, and educational background for all teaching staff employed at the centers at three points in time, 1994, 1996, and 2000. These data provide a detailed picture of the entire teaching workforce at the 75 centers in 2000, and allow a comparison of the workforce in that year to those in 1994 and 1996. This inside look paints a disturbing picture of a dedicated yet poorly paid, high-turnover workforce.


Part I of the book focuses on staff departures and center quality. In it, Whitebook and Sakai relate the types and magnitude of turnover occurring among teachers at child care centers to the level of quality provided there. They present empirical evidence on the correlation between center quality and staff stability as well as the perspectives of teachers and directors in their survey who reflect on the challenge of attaining and maintaining high-quality care.


In Part II, Whitebook and Sakai rely on in-depth, quantitative evidence to examine the experience of child care employment. They point out interesting relationships between the characteristics of the child care workforce and those who have chosen to leave, stay, or join on. They then discuss work and family decisions that impact child care workers' career decisions, including the rewards listed by workers as reasons they remain employed in child care.


Read the first chapter of the book: click here.

 
boxTop
CalSAC promotes high-quality, affordable afterschool care for every child
arrow Join CalSAC
Sign up to receive
arrow CalSAC Online
boxTop

FIND US ON

 


SAVE THE DATE

CalSAC's 9th Annual

CA Afterschool Challenge

May 20-21, 2013


GET INVOLVED


CalSAC is the CA State Affiliate of NAA. Get involved in the National movement -  

Join NAA Today!

 

 

California Workforce Innovation Network - Advancing Afterschool Programs. Building Careers. Strengthening Community.