This weekend I came across a press release from Media Newswire highlighting new research by University of Chicago sociologist Mario Small about how child care centers serve a function that is often overlooked — “they connect parents with each other as informal advisors in child rearing and with agencies that help with the challenges of parenting.”
About the study:
The centers become locations where parents can build “social capital”—the contacts they need to navigate through problems, such as concerns for a child’s development and finding good health care and schools. The concept of social capital, developed at the University over decades, helps explain the powerful effect of personal connections on social status and financial success.
Unacquainted parents often become dependent upon each other through networks at their children’s day care centers, said Mario Small, Professor in Sociology at the University of Chicago and author of Unanticipated Gains: Origins of Network Inequality in Everyday Life. The book, one of the first to look at the impact of child care centers on parents, finds a wide range of different outcomes for parents depending on their day care or preschool of choice.
“Parents come to school to find someone to care for their children, and they end up learning ways of taking care of each other,” Small said. “When you are a parent, particularly a first-time parent, the best resource you have is another parent.”
Mothers particularly build up their network, or social capital, in a variety of ways. By working together on fundraising activities or taking field trips, they meet others who can provide helpful advice about a child’s health, or help care for a child when parents have an emergency.
The research showed benefits for poor and non-poor parents. Mothers with children in child care centers had at least one more good friend than other mothers, for instance. Non-poor mothers who made friends at day care centers were nearly 60 percent less likely to be depressed than those who did not make friends. Poor mothers were less likely to experience homelessness if their children were enrolled in day care centers, even if they had experienced homelessness before.
Small’s research included more detailed findings about variations in the benefits of these centers…
Small found that not all the networks are equal, however. Some centers encourage connections by organizing parties and events around Mother’s Day. Child care centers that have strict pick-up and drop-off times are more likely to have strong parent networks because more parents gather at the same time and likely know each other.
The differences emerged from research based on Small’s “Childcare Centers and Families Survey” of 300 randomly sampled centers in New York in 2004. In addition to interviews with parents and center staff, the research also included data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study of 3,500 mothers of children born between 1998 and 2000 in the nation’s 20 largest cities.
The information about services and connections with social service providers was particularly helpful to poor mothers. Agencies find centers a convenient way to reach the families they seek to serve. “Part of the reason the centers can serve as brokers is that they deal with a very targeted population,” Small said.
Non-profit organizations, for instance, interested in reaching disadvantaged children with opportunities such as exposure to arts programs, or gifts at Christmas, find it convenient to work through day care centers, he found. Agencies providing health care assistance and information about domestic violence also find it useful to visit day care centers and post notices of their services on bulletin boards, he found.
“The reason this happens is because of the professional ethos of the centers. Over and over I heard center directors say, ‘You can’t take care of the child without taking care of the family,’” he said. Some centers, such Head Start, receive government funding and are required to provide resource information.
Small found that centers in poorer neighborhoods, at least in New York, are more likely to get services than those in more well-to-do neighborhoods. The experience may vary in other parts of the country.
Comments 13
What to Look For in a Day Care For Your Kids « Stone Wall Day Care — August 7, 2013
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TammyRusso — June 9, 2015
Thanks for sharing. Working parents have to balance between work and child care so it is hard to find a good balance. However child care centre is the best option for them.
Alise Harper — July 14, 2016
I am a mom and need to go back to work so I will need to send my kid to a day care. I like how you mention that research have shown that daycare is good socially for kids but it is also good for the parents to become friends. I think this will be beneficial for both the kids and my husband and I. Thanks for the information!
John — January 27, 2017
I really like how the article notes the benefits that both the child and the parent enjoy from sending the child to daycare. I know social interactions at a young age can be very important, especially when circumstances such as work don't permit parents to provide that interaction with their children part of the day. On another note, I like how the article notes daycare centers can benefit first time parents since it gives them chances to interact with and talk to other parents for advice.
Scott — February 2, 2017
I agree that one of the best resources parents have are other parents. I remember always going to my older siblings with questions about what to do at each milestone my children's life. It is nice to be able to give my younger siblings advice as their children grow up.
Kourtney Jensen — May 5, 2017
No mother ever likes to be separated from their child, especially when they aren't in their teens yet! I like that you made the point, and I agree with you, that it really does benefit their social life/skills. Children learn a lot and build strengths from a very young age, so to have them surrounded with other kids their age helps them interact with people, they learn to communicate, and it also helps with public manners. Being in daycare growing up helped me with learning new things and prepared me to go on to kindergarten and elementary school.
Kylie Dotts — August 14, 2017
I never knew that child care centers would also be a means through which charities could find children with needs. It's a beautifully clever way to find those people who have the greatest needs and then be able to help them forthwith. It seems like a brilliant want to be able to lift and better a community.
Todd Stauffer — February 15, 2018
It's interesting how you said that child care centers help parents network because they are all there to pick up kids at the same time. We just moved into a new area and we are lacking in the friends department of life. One of our sons needs to go to a child care center though while we work, so we'll have to look into finding some friends when we go to pick him up!
Bethany Birchridge — March 15, 2018
I never took into account that mothers were able to build supportive networks by taking their child to a day care facility. My friend has a toddler, and although she loves her son, will feel a bit lonely. I think it's important that parents have a healthy social life ,because it will help them better care for their child.
Gerty Gift — March 26, 2018
I've been considering enrolling my children in a day care center because I need to return to work. I had never heard of the mental health benefits of the mother with having her child in daycare. I can see how the support system would really help mothers out in figuring out how to deal with such a big life change as having a child.
Tammie Houston — September 10, 2021
I really like how you mentioned that taking your kid to a child care center will let you meet other parents and is a great opportunity to learn more about how to raise a kid. As a first-time mother, it's really hard adapting to my kid's needs especially since she's getting older all the time. It will be nice to get some tips from seasoned parenting veterans as well as get a break from taking care of my kid when they're off at daycare.
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Luke Smith — March 15, 2023
It's great that you mentioned how child care centres that have strict pick-up and drop-off times are more likely to have strong parent networks because more parents gather at the same time and likely know each other. I want my wife and our son to socialize more, so I am thinking of having them attend a childcare center. So, we should probably do that around June this year.