Who
is Raising Our Children - Parents or Child Care Providers?
Children's author eases the fears
of child care for parents and children
Childcare
workers in America held 1.3 million jobs in 2004, and that
number is expected to increase 27-percent over all other occupations
by 2014 according to Department of Labor.
Today, preschool children often spend much of their time in
the care of someone other than their mother or father. In
fact, many children are in childcare from 9 to 10 hours a
day, 5 days a week before they are a year old. For many this
continues until they enter kindergarten.
There is debate as to whether it's good
or bad for children, and while child development experts do
not agree on the answer to this question, one professional
Southern California child caregiver feels that as a society
we have the responsibility to create materials that allow
children to visually relate to being in the care of a babysitter.
The traditional picture book of a mom home with her children
is a fading reality.
"I want to soften the anxieties that parents and children
may have when away from each other," says Suanne Margaret
Hastings, author of Many Moods of Maddie, the first of many
books in the Baby-Sitter Series. "My books comfort children
with the idea that it's okay to be away from mom or dad and
left with a babysitter and that it can be fun!" With
that in mind, Hastings developed a distinctive tool for children
and their parents - as well as caregivers - in today's dual-income
household. The book set, called The Baby Sitter Series, is
designed for children ages 2-7.
"I initially began writing stories
to help entertain the children in my care, but found such
a love and a joy in the process that I continued over the
last four years developing an entire series of books as well
as other products to help children figure out just why these
'people' are in their lives and help make them feel good about
it," Hasting adds.
"Baby sitters, nanny's and daycare
workers often times become children's 'best friends' and are
the literal role models of the 21st century where in many
cases both parents are pursuing careers," says Hastings.
"Throughout ten years of providing child care, I noticed
that there are no tools or children's books out there that
help kids feel comfortable with the idea of being left alone
with a caregiver."
For better or for worse, childcare is
here to stay as the need for two incomes continues to rise
in America. The most important thing is that in making the
decision when and where to put a child in a childcare setting,
parents should understand the impacts of childcare. They need
to become informed about the pros and cons of daycare. Parents
who are educated about the childcare process can prepare their
children better for that next step into kindergarten and elementary
school.
Many Moods of Maddie: Bossy Boots (Suanne
Tastica Creation!)
ISBN: 0976934809
Suanne Tastica Creation!
9" x 9"
Hardcover - 24 pages - $12.95
Suanne
Margaret Hastings is a Canadian born writer/actress who majored
in Fine Arts at York University in Toronto, Ontario. In addition
to working both in front of and behind the camera on a variety
of T.V. shows, she has over ten years experience working with
children as a Nanny/Baby-Sitter. She has combined her talents
and created the "Baby-Sitter Series".
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