Abstract

Improved quality in home-based child care (family child care and family, friend, and neighbor care) is increasingly recognized as a vital component of early care and education service systems in the U.S. and abroad and is a target of recent federal and state policy initiatives in the U.S. This article presents data from a statewide survey of 73 child care resource and referral specialists across Illinois who work with family child care providers on a regular basis through home visiting, training, and technical assistance. Descriptive findings suggest that specialists who work with family child care providers perform a unique role in the early care and education field. The study examines job roles, common challenges and rewards, and needs for training. Specialists’ training needs include understanding the unique context of family child care, home visiting, coaching, and working with families. Understanding the training and professional development needs of support staff as well as the challenges faced in carrying out this work has the potential to inform state professional development systems as well as other initiatives aimed at improving quality in this sector of the early care and education workforce.

Highlights

  • Home-based child care is a widely used form of non-parental early care and education both within the U.S and abroad

  • The National Study of Early Care and Education estimates over one million paid home-based child care providers or family child care (FCC) providers and close to three million unpaid home-based caregivers or family, friend, and neighbor (FFN) caregivers care for children ages zero to five in the U.S (NSECE 2015)

  • More than half of the specialists in this study (54 %) did not hold a degree in early childhood education (ECE), compared with just under half (46 %) who had completed their highest degree in ECE

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Summary

Introduction

Home-based child care is a widely used form of non-parental early care and education both within the U.S and abroad. As a result of these trends, a variety of child care and social service agencies in communities across the country have developed programs to support home-based child care providers—both FCC and FFN caregivers, including child care resource and referral (CCR&R) agencies and networks that offer support services, technical assistance, materials and equipment, and training to providers (Hershfield et al 2005) Countries such as Australia and Canada have well-developed early care and education systems that include agencies that support home-based child care providers (Blaxland et al 2016; Friendly et al 2015)

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