Child Care: Questions to Ask About Before and After School
Center-Based Care
What is before and after school center-based care?
Before and after school care is generally for children 6 to
12 years of age. Programs offer age-appropriate activities
in the hours before and after school. Care is also provided
holidays, school breaks, and vacations. Center-based care
may be in a day care center, park and recreation department,
church, or youth group such as boys and girls clubs.
Ask the child care provider:
- Is the child care center licensed? Is the licensing
permit current?
- What are the tuition payments? When are they due?
- What are the hours? Holiday and vacation schedule?
- Is an upfront registration fee required? What are
admission requirements?
- Are there extra charges for such things as meals,
transportation, or late pick-ups?
- Are fees reduced if more than one child enrolls?
- Is financial assistance available?
- Is safe transportation provided to and from school?
Observe or ask about:
Facility
Does the facility have:
- carpeting, pads, and drapery to absorb noise?
- ample toys and art materials?
- plenty of indoor and outdoor space?
- special areas for quiet and active play?
- safe, creative outdoor play equipment?
- a quiet place for homework?
- places to practice hobbies, sports, music, or
dance?
Staff
Does the staff:
- 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?
- have low turnover?
- 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?
- handle discipline positively?
- set and consistently maintain limits?
Program
Does the program:
- provide daily outdoor activities?
- balance active, physical activities with quiet, restful
ones?
- prohibit play that could quickly get out of hand?
- have enough staff to take care of children on the
playground?
- patiently encourage children to solve problems on their
own?
- show children how to help themselves as much as possible?
- balance individual, small group, and large group
activities?
- allow children to pursue some activities without being
disturbed by others?
- provide plenty of time for children to complete their
projects?
- foster curiosity through opportunities to see new things
and try out new ideas?
- balance structured and unstructured activities?
Health and Safety
- 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? )
- Is the staff trained in first aid and CPR for children?
- Are important phone numbers posted near the phone?
(Examples include police, fire, poison control center,
hospital, children's physician, ambulance.)
- Does the facility have working smoke detectors and fire
extinguishers?
- Does my caregiver always know how to get in touch with
both parents?
- Does my child receive appropriate supervision?
- Can all doors in the center be opened from the outside at
all times?
- 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 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 floors free from spills, slippery surfaces, or small
throw rugs?
- Are toys safe, clean, and in good repair?
- Are play surfaces, indoors and out, softened with
carpeting or wood chips?
- Do children seem safe with one another?
- Is the outdoor area fenced and free of hazards?
- Is the play equipment safe and appropriate for each
child's level of development?
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.