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What Do Parents Expect from You?
March 27, 2008
Take care not to listen to anyone who tells you what you can and can't be in life.
-Meg Medina
When parents are selecting an early childhood program for their 3-, 4-, or 5-year-old children, what factors weigh most heavily in their decision-making?

Are they most concerned about cost and convenience of location?

Do they only care about academics?

Do they ask a lot about the qualifications of your teachers?

Are they impressed that your program is accredited?

Tell us what parents in your community expect from early childhood programs by participating in this week's Exchange Insta-Poll. Vote today and see how your input stacks up against that of your peers.


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This week, 85 Beginnings Workshop sets are now on sale for only $5 each, including those focusing on working with parents. Beginnings Workshop address the following curriculum areas:
  • Child Development
  • Program Development
  • Professional Development
  • Language and Literacy
  • Curriculum Issues
  • Environments
  • Parents

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Comments (10)

Displaying 5 of 10 Comments   [ View all ]
epowell · March 28, 2008
Meramec Campus Child Care Center
Manchester, MIssouri, United States


Most of the parents are concerned first about the ages accepted, cost, and teacher qualifications in this order of questioning.

Augustina Frempong · March 27, 2008
The Hub Family Resource Centre
Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada


One of my research projects in my Early Childhood Teaching Masters program focused on the same topic and the results of the survey I conducted on parents in my community yielded interesting results similar to some of the comments above.

Most parents have similar concerns and expectations when seeking non-parental care for their young children. However, these concerns and expectations may differ from community to community depending on prevailing issues and child care needs in that community. For the parents in my community the main issue was availability which limited them in their choice of care such as full time/part time and type of setting options as well as other issues such as proximity, cost and quality issues.

Nevertheless, when provided with all options the parents rated early childhood qualification (even though their expectation of such qualification was low-certificate) and care givers' first language as top priority. In addition, practicality such as cost, location and convenience sometimes override parents' concern for quality and satisfaction.



cheryl gould · March 27, 2008
Rocky Mountain Children\'s Discovery Center
Canon City, CO, United States


When answer the phone and talk to a new parent the first thing they ask is if we are room for their child and how much is the cost, we then invite them in for a tour before they make any decision. Usually at the tour they are up to more questions because they have a visual. They don't ask if we are accredited and don't ask about our 4 star Qualistar rating. In our area it is the cost, the hours and the availablity.

Liliana Sulikowska-Klebek · March 27, 2008
Lil\' Day Care
Kindersley, Saskatchewan, Canada


Rural and remote areas are different than cities. When parents are selecting an early childhood program in a very rural area the most important factor for them is not raising their child by a stranger, an outsider, or a child care provider who is culturally different than they are eventhough she is an early childhood educator who tries to improve the quality of existing programs. Then, they are taking into consideration the price, location and the opinions of others who have used child care facilities in the community etc.

Gwen Morgan · March 27, 2008
Wheelock College
Lincoln, MA, United States


I don't work in a program for children, but I have been involved in a lot of studies. The National Consumer Study in the 70s, found that parent choices were based on cost, location, Quality of relationships and social learning, basic ECE, whether the child is safe and healthy. Researchers rank-ordered these priorities and concluded, incorrectly, I think, that parents were more interested in cost and convenience than in quality. I read the data to tell us that parents first evaluate programs on accessibillity. If the program is in another state, or charges twice the market rate, it is not going to be put on a list from which the parent must choose. Parents then base their choices on quality: safety, health, learning, engagement, relationships, will my child like it?

Another parent study in the family child care field found that parents
feel unable to determine a program's quality; they would like an expert to go with them help them choose.

WFD conducted a study of how "family friendly" programs are, in order to develop a tool to measure ""family friendliness". The study found that directors are much
more family friendly than teachers,
which may mean our professional development of teachers is lacking in
some aspects of ECE.



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