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Current Filters: New in five years [remove]; Classification:Military Child Care [remove];
47 results found.|
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Air Force Manual 34-251: Air Force school-age programs A guide for the implementation of educational programs sponsored by the Air Force |
Other |
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Air Force/NACCRRA Quality Family Child Care (QFCC) project: Final report An evaluation of a joint Air Force-National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies initiative to increase the supply of high-quality family child care in civilian communities near Air Force bases by implementing the Air Force model of family child care among local providers |
Reports & Papers |
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Air Force/NACCRRA Quality Family Child Care (QFCC) project: Final report [Executive summary] A summary of an evaluation of a joint Air Force-National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies initiative to increase the supply of high-quality family child care in civilian communities near Air Force bases by implementing the Air Force model of family child care among local providers |
Executive Summary
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Applying the military model to improve child care in every state, for every child care A review of the steps taken by the military to improve its child care system after the enactment of the Military Child Care Act of 1989. |
Other
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Assessing Operation Purple: A program evaluation of a summer camp for military youth An evaluation of Operation Purple, a free summer camp program for military children who experience parental deployment, that examines curriculum implementation and participant outcomes related to communicating feelings about deployment-related stress, understanding military culture and service, and environmental knowledge and practice, based on camp director reports and visitor logs and on a comparison of pre- and posttest parent and child surveys from participants and matched nonparticipants |
Reports & Papers |
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Assessing Operation Purple: A program evaluation of a summer camp for military youth [Executive summary] A summary of an evaluation of Operation Purple, a free summer camp program for military children who experience parental deployment, that examines curriculum implementation and participant outcomes related to communicating feelings about deployment-related stress, understanding military culture and service, and environmental knowledge and practice, based on camp director reports and visitor logs and on a comparison of pre- and posttest parent and child surveys from participants and matched nonparticipants |
Executive Summary |
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Be all that we can be: Lessons from the military for improving our nation's child care system An examination of ways in which the military made significant improvements in its child care system, including the military?s approach to improving quality, keeping care affordable for parents, and expanding availability, with lessons on how similar improvements might be made in civilian child care |
Other |
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Be all that we can be: Lessons from the military for improving our nation's child care system: 2004 follow-up Highlights from a 2004 follow-up study on the military’s systematic approach to quality child care by the National Women’s Law Center |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care: How do military and civilian center costs compare? A comparison between the costs of providing early childhood education and care services through military programs and civilian programs |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care: Like the military, is it time for shared responsibility? A discussion of child care and federal child care policy in the United States, with an examination of the United States military child care system as the basis for a national child care model |
Other |
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Child care: Like the military, is it time for shared responsibility? [Executive summary] A summary of a discussion of child care and federal child care policy in the United States, with an examination of the United States military child care system as the basis for a national child care model |
Executive Summary |
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Child care use and satisfaction among military families with preschool children: Technical report A study of the child care arrangements, satisfaction, and costs of military families with children under six years old, based on survey data |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care use and satisfaction among military families with preschool children: Technical report [Executive summary] A summary of a study of the child care arrangements, satisfaction, and costs of military families with children under six years old, based on survey data |
Executive Summary |
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Child development services A description of the policy and procedures for the establishment of Child Development Services (CDS) under the United States Army |
Other |
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Continuity of care, professional community, and the policy context: Potential benefits for infant and toddler teachers’ professional development A study of the benefits of a continuity of care (COC) in a military child care context in which caregivers care for the same children from birth to age two, an examination of the approach to caregiver professional development used in this context, and the role of military policy in the work and professional development of center staff, based on interviews with four staff members of an Air Force child development center (CDC) |
Reports & Papers |
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Department of Defense Instruction (Number 6060.3): School-Age Care (SAC) program A guide for the implementation of educational programs sponsored by the Military Services programs under the Department of Defense |
Other |
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[Department of Defense policies on accommodating children with special needs in child care programs] A study of United States Department of Defense child care policies for serving children with special needs, based on a review of documents and interviews with key informants |
Reports & Papers |
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Does the military child care system serve its purpose? A summary of an assessment of the military child care system's success in terms of its U.S. Department of Defense goals and a discussion of options for transforming the system |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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An examination of the relationship between emotional intelligence and the leadership styles of early childhood professionals An examination of the relationship between emotional intelligence and leadership style in 203 Department of Defense Children and Youth Program Managers early childhood professionals |
Reports & Papers
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Examining child care need among military families A study of the child care choices and unmet child care needs of military families, based on a survey of families of active-duty military members |
Reports & Papers |
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Examining child care need among military families [Executive summary] A summary of a study of the child care choices and unmet child care needs of military families, based on a survey of families of active-duty military members |
Executive Summary |
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Examining the cost of military child care A study of the costs associated with providing care to children in Department of Defense (DoD)-operated Child Development Centers (CDCs), Family Child Care (FCC) homes, and centers operated by outside providers under contract |
Reports & Papers |
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Examining the effects of accreditation on military child development center operations and outcomes A study assessing the value of military Child Development Center accreditation over the benefits associated with Department of Defense certification |
Reports & Papers |
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The impact of the Developmental Training Model on staff development in Air Force Child Development Programs A study of staff perceptions of a Developmental Training Model based on historical documents and interviews with 16 key stakeholders at 4 Air Force bases |
Reports & Papers
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Improving the delivery of military child care: An analysis of current operations and new approaches A survey-based assessment of how current military child care systems meet families' needs in terms of accessibility, quality, readiness, and affordability, and recommendations for new policies regarding the organization and structure of military child care |
Reports & Papers |
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Peer Reviewed Journal