Children in high-quality child care programs perform better in math, language, and reading and show fewer behavioral problems. Research overwhelmingly finds that provider training, retention, and compensation are the best indicators for child care quality. A well-trained child care workforce is needed to meet the increasing demand for high-quality child care in the United States to ensure that children start school ready to learn.

Child care workers provide vital services to families with young children in a variety of settings, including public and private centers, pre-kindergarten programs, and home-based environments.

Provider Setting

Number of Workers

Percent of Workers

Center-based Staff

550,000

24%

Family Child Care Home Providers

650,000

28%

Paid Relatives

804,000

34%

Paid Non-Relatives

298,000

13%

Total

2,301,000

100%

Children in early care and education are better prepared for school when their teachers have higher levels of education and specialized training.

Many child care providers lack the education and training necessary to provide high-quality child care.

Low compensation and high job turnover adversely affect the quality of care that child care workers are able to provide.

State compensation programs have shown promise for improving provider education levels. North Carolina's Teacher Education and Compensation Helps (T.E.A.C.H.) initiative provides scholarships to child care providers pursuing a credential or advanced degree. Teachers participating in the associate degree scholarship program improved their education levels and left their child care centers at a rate of less than 9 percent per year. Turnover rates for T.E.A.C.H. associate degree scholarship recipients are very low. For example, less than 5 percent in 14 states, 5-9 percent in 6 states and 10 percent in 1 state. 23 states have since adopted the program.
http://www.childcareservices.org/_downloads/TEACH%20annual%20report_08.pdf


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United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Household Data Annual Averages: Employed persons by detailed occupation, sex, race, and Hispanic or Latino ethnicity, 2007. (http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat11.pdf).

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Center for the Child Care Workforce. Estimating the Size and Components of the U.S. Child Care Workforce and Caregiving Population. May 2002. (http://www.ccw.org/pubs/workforceestimatereport.pdf), 24.

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Professional Development Initiative for Early Care and Education in Kansas. "Who Cares for Kansas Children? Early Education Workforce Study." April 2002.

Center for the Child Care Workforce. Current Data on the Salaries and Benefits of the U.S. Early Childhood Education Workforce. June 2004. (http://www.ccw.org/pubs/2004Compendium.pdf), 5.

Wisconsin Child Care Research Partnership. Trends Over Time: Wisconsin's Child Care Workforce. Madison: University of Wisconsin-Extension, November 2003.

Child Care Services Association. "T.E.A.C.H. Early Childhood Project." (http://www.childcareservices.org/teach/project.html#benefits/results).

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