You should
interview home child care provider to find out the facilities they offer, the meals they provide for kids and developmental activities for children.
Not exact matches
Thirty - two focus groups and 20 key informant
interviews were conducted with staff from Head Start,
home visiting, and
child care programs; pediatricians; behavioral health providers; parents of young
children; tribal leaders; and other stakeholders in seven diverse American Indian and Alaska Native communities.
Seven days have now passed since Steve Messham, a victim of
child abuse at a north Wales
care home, alleged in a Newsnight
interview that a senior Tory politician had abused him during the 1980s.
Family Service Worker — Department of Human Services, Bentonville, AR 2001 - 2004 Family Services Worker in the Department of
Children and Family Services (CPS), in «Investigations» (conducted interviews and investigated Child Abuse Hotline reports), «Protective Services» (monitored safety of children maintaining in their homes and facilitated resources for families with «true findings» of abuse or neglect, and «Foster Care» (assisted in meeting the daily needs of foster children and foster care pro
Children and Family Services (CPS), in «Investigations» (conducted
interviews and investigated
Child Abuse Hotline reports), «Protective Services» (monitored safety of
children maintaining in their homes and facilitated resources for families with «true findings» of abuse or neglect, and «Foster Care» (assisted in meeting the daily needs of foster children and foster care pro
children maintaining in their
homes and facilitated resources for families with «true findings» of abuse or neglect, and «Foster
Care» (assisted in meeting the daily needs of foster children and foster care provide
Care» (assisted in meeting the daily needs of foster
children and foster care pro
children and foster
care provide
care providers).
▶ The quality of the
home environment for child development indexed by aspects of parental care giving, measured by observation and maternal interview in the home at child - age 12 and 24 months using the HOME Inventor
home environment for
child development indexed by aspects of parental
care giving, measured by observation and maternal
interview in the
home at child - age 12 and 24 months using the HOME Inventor
home at
child - age 12 and 24 months using the
HOME Inventor
HOME Inventory.18
These included characteristics on multiple levels of the
child's biopsychosocial context: (1)
child factors: race / ethnicity (white, black, Hispanic, and Asian / Pacific Islander / Alaska Native), age, gender, 9 - month Bayley Mental and Motor scores, birth weight (normal, moderately low, or very low), parent - rated
child health (fair / poor vs good / very good / excellent), and hours per week in
child care; (2) parent factors: maternal age, paternal age, SES (an ECLS - B — derived variable that includes maternal and paternal education, employment status, and income), maternal marital status (married, never married, separated / divorced / widowed), maternal general health (fair / poor versus good / very good / excellent), maternal depression (assessed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale at 9 months and the World Mental Health Composite International Diagnostic
Interview at 2 years), prenatal use of tobacco and alcohol (any vs none), and violence against the mother; (3) household factors: single - parent household, number of siblings (0, 1, 2, or 3 +), language spoken at
home (English vs non-English), neighborhood good for raising kids (excellent / very good, good, or fair / poor), household urbanicity (urban city, urban county, or rural), and modified Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment — Short Form (HOME - SF) sc
home (English vs non-English), neighborhood good for raising kids (excellent / very good, good, or fair / poor), household urbanicity (urban city, urban county, or rural), and modified Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment — Short Form (HOME - SF) sc
home (English vs non-English), neighborhood good for raising kids (excellent / very good, good, or fair / poor), household urbanicity (urban city, urban county, or rural), and modified
Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment — Short Form (HOME - SF) sc
Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment — Short Form (HOME - SF) sc
Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment — Short Form (
HOME - SF) sc
HOME - SF) sc
HOME - SF) score.
We provide: • staff who are professionally trained, friendly and
child - focused • separate assessment
interviews • secure and comfortable
child care centres with toys and games • separate entrances for parents • orientation visits for
children as required • outside and
home supervised visits, in some cases • observational reports.
Baseline covariates included in regression models were site of enrollment (hospital or office), age of
child at
interview, and characteristics of the mother (age, education, race / ethnicity, employment), father (employment), family (marital status / father in household, number of siblings, owned
home, income), and infant (low birth weight, source of payment for
care).
Thirty - two focus groups and 20 key informant
interviews were conducted with staff from Head Start,
home visiting, and
child care programs; pediatricians; behavioral health providers; parents of young
children; tribal leaders; and other stakeholders in seven diverse American Indian and Alaska Native communities.
In 2001, we observed a random sample of 203 licensed family
child care homes and
interviewed providers about the costs of providing family
child care and their experiences as family
child care providers.
The
children entered out - of -
home care in NSW between May 2010 and October 2011 and are aged between 9 months to 17 years old when
interviewed.
Data for the implementation and impact studies will be collected from a variety of sources, including
interviews with parents; observations of the
home environment; observed interactions of parents and
children; direct assessments of
children's development; observations of
home visitors in their work with families during
home visits; logs, observations, and
interviews with
home visitors, supervisors, and program administrators; program model documentation from program developers, grantees, and local sites; and administrative data on
child abuse, health
care use, maternal health, birth outcomes, and employment and earnings.
Well - trained interviewers visited one of the parents (preferably the mother, 95.6 %) at
home to administer an
interview covering a wide range of topics, including the
child's developmental history and somatic health, parental psychopathology, and
care utilization.