Abstract

In 1982, under the patronage of the Ministry of Social Welfare and with financial aid from UNICEF, three consultants from the University of Malaya conducted a National Child Care Survey to: provide an overview of child care services in Malaysia; to design a monitoring system to help child minders and relevant personnel to assess the standards of child care at the centres; and to develop a series of policy recommendations for implementing “better child care” in the country. This paper presents the first part of the National Child Care Survey, that is, an overview of child care services available in Malaysia. The survey was conducted in five states in Peninsular Malaysia — Penang, Perak, Selangor, Kelantan and Melaka — and in two cities — Kuching and Kota Kinabalu — in East Malaysia. The national survey studied the type of care found at 537 centres where 824 minders looked after 7, 884 children. Four major aspects of child care were identified and subsequently examined: the physical conditions and environmental hygiene of the premises; profile of children under care; daily practices; and the personnel in the three basic types of centres, i.e., Institution-based, plantation-or estate-based and home-based.

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