"To succeed,
consult three old people." - Chinese Proverb
Sound Off: The Trouble
with Day Care
This is the provocative title for an article in the June 2005 issue of Psychology
Today. The article, with the full title of "The Trouble with Day
Care: Are Scientists Telling Parents the Whole Truth?," is based on the
latest findings from the National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development (NICHD) Study of Early Child Care, an ongoing
$100 million survey of 1,100 children. While the study engages 20 researchers,
the point of view of the article is based on the comments of only one of these,
Jay Belsky, who has been a high-profile critic of child care for decades.
This is not to say that the early results just now being released aren't cause
for concern. According to an Education Week (May 4,
2005) report on the study....
"Some of the negative effects of child care fade once children enter school,
but others linger through the end of the third grade....While the relationship
between longer hours in care and greater behavioral problems grew weaker over
time, the researchers still found a strong link to poor social skills. They
also found a continuing connection between the amount of time children spend
in center-based care and conflcts between them and their parents.
"Children, however, benefit by spending time in nonmaternal care when its
quality is high. Standardized 3rd grade acheivement tests reviewed by the researchers
showed that higher scores were linked to high-quality care. And more time in
center-based arrangements was tied to better memory skills in that grade."
While Belsky's fellow researchers argue that these findings are a complicated
mixture of good and bad news, and that it is too early to draw firm conclusions,
Belsky contends that they tainted by a "liberal progressive feminist bias."
and that "their concern is to not make mothers feel bad."
In the Psychology Today article, Belksy further argues that the
other NICHD scientists "gloss over the finding that the aggressive children
in the study were more than just a little defiant. They were in the 'at risk'
range, meaning their behavior was close to the threshold requiring therapy."
Share your views on the implications of these findings as well has how they are
reported in the popular press in today's Sound Off. Go to http://mail.ccie.com/go/eed/0623
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