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Summary of Key Findings for Working Paper No. 19
Background
High-quality child care plays an important dual role in the
lives of families: It supports both parents' work as well
as the cognitive and social development of children. Child
care's dual role is particularly important for low-income
young mothers who lack work experience and teen mothers whose
early childbearing increases their children's of poor developmental
outcomes. But if low-income parents and their children are
to realize the benefits high-quality care, it is important
that these families' child care choices be understood.
This study examines the types of child care used by young
mothers who enter the workforce, in the context of eight different
welfare and employment programs that operated in five states.
Key Findings
- Programs that increased employment or participation in
education or training activities significantly increased
use of child care overall. However, comparing two types
of child care - formal care arrangements and home-based
care arrangements - it was found that programs that increased
employment or participation in employment-related activities
among young mothers increased use of formal child care and
had no effect on the use of home-based child care.
- Looking more closely at two types of formal care
- center-based care and Head Start - a clear pattern emerges.
The four programs that increased mothers' employment or
participation in employment-related activities increased
use of center-based care and decreased use of Head Start.
It appears that as the young mothers in these programs moved
from welfare to work they traded use of Head Start for center-based
care.
- Programs that did not increase employment or participation
in employment-related activities had no effect on use of
any care overall or on the use of formal care, home-based
care, or Head Start. Surprisingly, programs that did not
increase young mothers' employment or participation in employment-related
activities significantly decreased their use of center-based
care relative to the control groups. This is a puzzling
finding; there are no clear reasons for the decrease in
center-based care.
Conclusions and Implications
These results indicate that policymakers and program directors
should strongly consider adding services during the hours
that Head Start does not operate or extending funding to
make Head Start a full-day program. Many Head Start programs
have already moved in this direction. Because Head Start
is available only to preschool-aged children, efforts should
also be continued to improve the quality of all child care.
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