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Friendly Intruders - Childcare Professionals and Family Life (Paperback)
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Friendly Intruders - Childcare Professionals and Family Life (Paperback)
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The governments of many industrialized societies have developed
extensive childcare facilities and services to meet the needs of
young children and their working parents, but no such program on a
national scale has yet evolve in the United Staes. Some who oppose
federal aid or control believe that mothers should remain at home
with their preschool children rather than turn them over to
childcare professionals--the "friendly intruders" of the
titels--and that any other policy is a threat to the moral climate
and stability of family life. However, since the demand for
childcare services is very great, and since Congress has previously
passed relevant legislation (which was vetoed by President Nixon),
the issue of childcare will surely rise again soon. In this study,
based upon direct observation of a local childcare program in
California, the author examines several pof the practical policy
issues concerning childcare which have not yet been resolved. Who
will control such programs in the future, public school systems or
others? Which agencies or institutions will certify the competence
of childcare personnel? To what extent will parents contribute to
the content of the programs provided for their young children? A
major part of Professor Joffe's study is concerned with the
emerging professionalism of early childhood educators. In a pattern
now understood to be classic, such persons seek status and
recognition through education, certification, and membership in
professional associations. However, what happens when parents and
professional disagree about values, behavioral norms, and the
educational content of a nursery school program? Who is the
"expert" in such a confrontation? The author observed profoundly
different orientations to childcare not only between professionals
and parents, but also among different groups of parents, especially
along racial and class lines; how can professionals accommodate
such differences? The author's conclusions emerge from careful
study of day-by-day encounters between staff, parents and
supervisors, giving to her book a sense of immediacy and
well-focused understanding that is rarely achieved in academic
studies. Parents, educators and policy analysts concerned with the
subject will find it indispensable. This title is part of UC
Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of
California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest
minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist
dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed
scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology.
This title was originally published in 1977.
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