"Early Child Care" is about the very young child--infant,
toddler, and early preschool--in today's world. It grew out of a
series of conferences sponsored by the National Institute of Mental
Health, the Children's Hospital of Washington, D.C., and the
Committee on Day Care of the Maternal and Child Health Section of
the American Public Health Association. Each of the sponsoring
agencies represents a focal point for pressures from groups
concerned with improving the care of the young child. Faced with
common concern, the three sponsoring agencies brought together a
number of experts in the field to pool information and experience
and to review research findings as a basis for sound planning for
children less than three years of age.
The authors included in "Early Child Care" are pioneers in the
true sense of the word.. Until recently, no one has tried to
specify exactly what goes on between mother and her baby, who does
what to whom in the exchange, and what happens if, instead of one
mother, there is no mother, an alternating day and night mother, or
many different substitutes for the mother. Until all that
transpires between the mother and her baby in the best of
circumstances is comprehended in sufficient detail that it can be
confidently reproduced, it is impossible to make alternative plans.
"Early Child Care" is an effort to identify what is known about
young children and apply it to day-by-day programming.
Millions of mothers give their babies a good start, providing
devoted and painstaking care. Such mothers somehow know when a
child needs to be let alone--and when to respond. This volume
attempts to define how such instincts can be reproduced in other
settings.
"Caroline A. Chandler" was a consultant in child mental health
and early child care at the Center for Studies of Child and Family
Mental Health, National Institute of Mental Health in Maryland.
"Reginald S. Lourie" was director of the department of psychiatry
at the Children's Hospital, Washington D. C. and the founder of The
Reginald S. Lourie Center for Infants and Young Children in
Maryland. "Ann DeHuff Peters" was associate professor of maternal
and child health at the School of Public Health, University of
North Carolina. "Laura L. Dittmann" was professor emeritus in the
department of human development/Institute for Child Study at the
University of Maryland.
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