Child Care: Questions to Ask About Infant/Toddler Family Care
What is family child care?
Family child care is done by providers who are licensed to care
for children in their home. The caregiver is often a mother
with her own small children. Family child care providers are
licensed by the state. The states also have rules about the
number of adults needed to take care of a certain number of
children. Generally, a child care home should not have more
than 6 children per adult caregiver, including the caregiver's
own children. No caregiver working alone should care for more
than 2 children who are under 2 years of age.
Ask the Child Care Provider:
- Can you tell me more about your background and
experience?
- What are some reasons you enjoy taking care of children?
Do you have children of your own?
- How will my child be transported if you leave the house? Do
I need to provide a car seat?
- What are your expectations regarding length of
commitment?
- Do you smoke? Do you have any health problems?
- Are you trained in first aid and CPR for children?
- What kinds of activities might you plan for my child?
- What are your views on discipline? Meals? Television?
Computers? Video Games? Playmates?
- What would you do if ____? (Give examples relevant to
your situation: medical and personal emergencies, common
problems with child.)
- Can you give me several references?
- May I have a tour of your home?
- Do you have a current licensing permit?
- What are the tuition payments? When are they due?
- What are the hours? Holiday and vacation schedule?
- Do you provide meals or snacks? Is there a charge for food?
- What other extra charges might I expect to pay?
- Are fees reduced if more than one child enrolls?
- Are deductions offered for periods of absence?
- What is the caregiver to child ratio? Federal guidelines
for centers suggest no more than 1:3 for infants; 1:4 for
toddlers; 1:8 for children aged 3 to 6.
- What is the procedure for medical emergencies?
- What are the policies regarding illness? (for example,
are parents contacted if another child has a contagious
disease? Does caregiver have someone to substitute in
case she gets sick?)
- What questions do you have for me?
Observe or Ask About:
Home
Does the home have:
- plenty of toys and art materials?
- enough indoor and outdoor space for children to play?
- special areas for quiet and active play?
- safe, creative outdoor play equipment?
- a quiet place for homework?
- places to practice extracurricular skills (sports, music,
dance)?
- smoke detectors and fire extinguishers? Regular fire
drills? Alternate exits?
Caregiver
Does the caregiver:
- welcome my questions and suggestions?
- share my childrearing philosophy?
- take time to share my child's experiences with me?
- really listen and talk to the children?
- sensitively handle feelings of fear, shyness, upset, and
anger?
- respect each child's unique background and interests?
- guide rather than direct behavior?
- seem cheerful, affectionate, and warm?
- have training and experience in early child education?
- establish and consistently maintain limits?
Program
Does the program:
- balance active, physical activities with quiet, restful
ones?
- provide ample rest and nap times?
- prohibit play that could quickly get out of hand?
- patiently encourage toddlers to solve some problems on
their own?
- help children deal with feelings constructively?
- have a well-defined, predictable
schedule of daily activities?
- balance structured and unstructured activities?
- encourage language development?
Health and Safety
- Does the home have smoke detectors and fire
extinguishers? Regular fire drills? Alternate exits?
- Are important phone numbers posted near the phone?
(Examples include police, fire, poison control center,
hospital, children's physician, ambulance.)
- Does your caregiver always know how to get in touch with
both parents?
- Are parents contacted if another child has a contagious
illness or an accident?
- Does your child receive constant supervision, indoors and
out?
- Is your baby checked often when in a crib or playpen?
- Is all baby equipment strong, stable, and in good repair?
- Is the crib latched?
- Are the crib slats no more than 2 and 3/8 inches apart?
Does the crib have bumper pads? Does the mattress firmly
abut the side of the crib?
- Does the home have separate cribs and crib sheets for
each infant?
- Do strollers or infant seats have safety harnesses?
- Are the crib and playpen free of toys that could be used
to climb out?
- Can all doors be opened from the outside at all times?
- Are the doors and windows locked?
- Do strong screens or metal bars cover the windows
(especially important above ground level)? Do all glass
doors have decals?
- Are the rooms well ventilated and comfortable year-round?
- Are the bathroom facilities clean and easily accessible
to children?
- Are latched safety gates placed at the top and/or bottom
of stairways?
- Are stairways and walkways free from clutter?
- Are small, sharp, or otherwise dangerous items out of
reach or locked in a cupboard, drawer, or cabinet?
(Examples include pins, thumbtacks, paper clips, matches,
lighters, knives, plastic bags, scissors, guns, razor
blades, glassware, working appliances.)
- Are poisonous items stored out of reach or locked in
cupboards, drawers, or cabinets? (Examples include
cleaning products, polish, bleach, medicines, cosmetics,
perfumes, aerosol cans, and first aid supplies.)
- Are the home and yard free from poisonous plants?
- Are all foods or drinks within reach safe for your child?
(Examples of dangerous foods or beverages: any food that
a child could choke on like popcorn or hard candy;
beverages that are hot or alcoholic.)
- Is your child kept away from dangerous places like the
stove or hot water faucets? Do all electrical sockets
have protective covers?
- Have furniture and other household objects with sharp
corners been padded or removed?
- Has attention been paid to objects that could be pulled
or knocked over? (Examples include tablecloths,
electrical cords, lamps, furniture.)
- Is your child safe around pets? Are pet dishes out of
reach?
- Are toys safe, clean, and in good repair?
- Are play surfaces, indoors and out, softened with
carpeting or wood chips?
- Is the outdoor area fenced and free of hazards?
- Is the play equipment safe and appropriate for my child's
level of development?
Meals
- Is my caregiver knowledgeable about my baby's food
requirements and feeding schedule?
- Does the caregiver serve food I want my child to eat?
- Are children allowed to leave food on their plates? (They
should never be forced to eat.)
- Are portions small and second helpings available?
- Is the kitchen clean?
Written by Donna Warner Manczak, Ph.D., M.P.H.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2008 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.