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"Some people can make lead float where others will see their straw sink."
–Yugoslavian proverb
CHILD CARE IN THE PUBLIC
SCHOOLS
Twelve years ago Child Care Information Exchange (November, 1991)
published a status report, "Pre-K in the Public Schools," in which
Bettye Caldwell observed....
"In my mind advocates for the schools and for child care are natural
allies. But in reality they have behaved as natural enemies. School personnel
may look down upon child care programs as providing only custodial care, and
child care providers may accuse public schools of ignoring the social needs
of children and families. As both domains have come under attack -- public schools
for 'failing' to educate and child care for 'weakening the family' -- each has
sought to bolster its self-esteem by asserting its independence from and superiority
to the other.
"But in fact both domains provide both care and education, and both domains
have much to gain by working together. One might be tempted to suggest that
attempts to unite the two domains are too late: the general public now sees
both services as inadequate and flawed. But I believe it is never too late to
develop a service program that is in harmony with patterns of human need. A blending
of care and education can meet the needs of children for developmental guidance
and the needs of parents for effective supervision of their children more conveniently
than any other pattern of service."
For the March 2003 issue of Child Care Information Exchange we will be taking a new look at the role
public school systems in the United States are playing in the early childhood
world. We welcome your insights for this article. Send them to Roger Neugebauer
at [email protected].
For more information about Exchange's magazine, books, and other products pertaining to ECE, go to www.ccie.com.
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