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With more than half of children under age three in the United States enrolled in non-parental care on a weekly basis, there is increasing demand for high-quality early education and care programming for infants and toddlers. Despite the need, more than 51 percent of families live in child care deserts, defined as geographical areas where there are three or more children for each available licensed child care slot. Nationally, some states have more than five infants and toddlers for every licensed child care slot, with low-income counties offering the fewest options.
The Center for American Progress explains that infants and toddlers living in low-income families are impacted by a range of persistent stressors that undermine child development, including disparities in housing, health, nutrition, and economic security. Optimal child development is dependent on high-quality care, yet the 2021 fact sheet from Zero to Three shows that 75 percent of toddlers enrolled in center care and 93 percent enrolled in home-based care are in programs of low to mediocre quality. This means children are not experiencing the kind of relational, language, and cognitive stimulation that can positively impact development and learning. “Poorer quality child care does not provide this boost and can even be detrimental to development where children lack other resources” (4).
Because of the rapid growth of the brain during the first three years of life, low-quality child care experiences are particularly concerning. In Illinois, data reflects national trends, with less than 20 percent of infants and toddlers having access to licensed child care and only 5 percent having access to high-quality care. Across the United States, the quality of care for infants and toddlers remains low and variable. Expanding access to high-quality, affordable child care is a key priority for leadership training, policy, and practice.
The State of Child Care for Babies: The Need to Do Better for Our Youngest Children (2021) points out that barriers to high-quality programming are connected to systemic weaknesses. Critical anchors for high-quality child care for infants and toddlers include the following:
Infant and toddler teachers have a higher turnover rate than other early childhood professionals. Up to 49 percent of infant and toddler teachers leave their centers or the field each year. According to the most recent OPRE report (March 2023), centers that serve children ages birth through three only or birth through five years old have higher turnover rates than centers that serve children ages three through five years old only. This level of turnover is particularly detrimental for infants and toddlers due to their rapidly developing brains and their essential need for predictable relationships, high-quality cognitive and language stimulation, and individualized care. In addition, the high turnover rate has enormous implications for the training and preparation of the workforce and for the role of early childhood leaders facing immense challenges in staffing, training, building learning communities, and promoting quality improvement.
What steps can program leaders take?
Teaching infants and toddlers is incredibly complex and demanding. There are several high-impact practices that can strengthen early childhood programs that serve infants and toddlers. Leaders need to ensure teachers experience a sense of belonging, have access to personal and professional resources, and feel included in decisions that impact them. The following strategies can help achieve those goals:
Incorporate a trauma-informed approach to leadership. Infant and toddler teachers face particularly demanding work-related stressors such as long work hours, insufficient professional support, and limited control over their working conditions. Important research shows that for infant and toddler teachers, professional stress is magnified by economic hardship, mental health struggles, and personal stressors. Make compassionate support the norm for your program:
Focus on building an inclusive, caring learning community. Program leaders need to focus on building a cohesive community within programs, strengthening professional relationships, and spending time with individual staff. One-on-one relationships with program staff can make all the difference to the program’s stability and to the staff’s well-being. Teachers who report high levels of connectedness with other staff, experience better supervisor support, and feel more control over their work report lower stress, provide higher quality care, and are less likely to leave their jobs. Positive relationships with supervisors and overall organizational well-being are essential to achieving staff stability. Importantly, teacher well-being is a consistent predictor of teachers’ intentions to keep working at their current programs and to continue in the early education and care profession. The following action steps can help you facilitate these priorities:
Make family engagement a priority. Build on and expand the ways families are included in the daily life of the program:
Build a vision for high-quality teaching. In a review of 161 peer-reviewed papers between 2009 and 2020, infant and toddler teachers received fewer professional development supports than other early education teachers, with the fewest supports available for teachers in under-resourced communities. Existing training, coaching, and technical assistance should be focused on the specific work of teaching infants and toddlers. Consider new strategies to add to your practices:
Step up into advocacy. Information and resources linked in this article can be used to communicate with community and state leaders about the importance of providing high-quality programming for infants and toddlers. Share your personal story with community leaders. Invite your local newspaper to highlight outstanding child care programs in your community – beginning with your own. Share the ways your program is having an impact on the lives of children and families. Join with national and state organizations to leverage collective impact on behalf of infants, toddlers, families, and teachers. Spread the message that infants and toddlers are worthy of great investment, and boldly ask for support.
While tremendous progress has been made in updating professional competencies and standards related to infant and toddler teaching, many challenges remain. Together, we can celebrate, encourage, and celebrate the work of family child care and early education and care programs serving our most vulnerable children. Collectively, we can increase our impact by offering important facts, recommendations for practice, and action steps for advocacy that can empower and strengthen the field.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
For support or more information about this article, please contact Marie Masterson at: mmasterson1@nl.edu
To check out the many resources and professional development offerings at McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership, please see: https://mccormickcenter.nl.edu/
Marie L. Masterson, Ph.D., is the director of quality assessment for the state of Illinois ExceleRate at the McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership. She holds a doctorate in early childhood education, is a licensed teacher, and is a national speaker and award-winning author of many books and articles that address research-based, practical skills for high-quality teaching, quality improvement, and leadership. She is a contributing author and editor of Developmentally Appropriate Practice in Early Childhood Programs Serving Children Birth Through Age Eight, Fourth Edition (NAEYC), author of Transforming Teaching: Creating Lesson Plans for Child-Centered Learning in Preschool (NAEYC)and Let’s Talk Toddlers: A Practical Guide to High Quality Teaching (Redleaf Press), and co-author of Building on Whole Leadership: Energizing and Strengthening Your Early Childhood Program (Gryphon House). Dr. Masterson is a former higher education faculty teacher trainer and early childhood specialist for the Virginia Department of Education.