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Current Filters: Resource Type:Reports & Papers [remove]; Pub Year:2003 [remove]; State:ILLINOIS [remove]; Full Text:yes [remove]; Classification:Child Care & Early Education Provider Workforce [remove];

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Child care meets health care: What other states can teach us about insuring the child care workforce in Illinois
Day Care Action Council of Illinois, July, 2003
Chicago: Day Care Action Council of Illinois.

An exploration of program models for the provision of health insurance to early childhood workers, and recommendations for the development of a framework to provide health care coverage to early childhood workers in Illinois, based on case studies of programs currently implemented in California, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and North Carolina

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Counting the child care workforce: A catalog of state data sources to quantify and describe child caregivers in the fifty states and the District of Columbia
Breunig, Gretchen Stahr, 2003
Seattle: University of Washington, Human Services Policy Center.

A report on data sources suitable for use in calculating the size of the child care workforce for individual states

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An exploratory study: Early childhood caregivers' perceptions of community violence and its impact on practice
Jor'dan, Jamilah R., 2003
Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Loyola University of Chicago

A qualitative analysis of data from interviews with 73 directors, teachers, and assistant teachers in Chicago early childhood programs regarding their experiences with community violence and its consequences for caregiving practices, support needs, and staff recruitment and retention

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Research Connections is supported by grant #90YE0104 from the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents are solely the responsibility of the National Center for Children in Poverty and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, the Administration for Children and Families, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

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