Military Child Care Takes Top Quality Spots in National Report

  • Published
  • By Gerry J. Gilmore
  • American Forces Press Service
The Defense Department's stateside military
child care system took first place in the categories of quality oversight
and standards for a second time as part of a national child care advocacy
group's report, a senior official said here today.

The National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies
recently examined child care practices in 50 states and the District of
Columbia for its most-current report and awarded the Defense Department the
highest marks for quality for child care oversight and standards, Barbara
Thompson, director of the Pentagon's Office of Family Policy, Children and
Youth, told Pentagon Channel and American Forces Information Service
reporters.

The association twice has reported on child care licensing standards to
assess their quality of oversight and standards, Thompson said. The Defense
Department also earned the same honors in the group's 2007 report, she said.

"This is the second time that we were No. 1 in both oversight and
standards," Thompson said. "No other state has ever reached that, so we're
very, very proud of this achievement."

Two-time recognition by the association reinforces the fact that military
families can rest assured that the Defense Department provides top-quality
child care, Thompson said.

"I think it gives you the satisfaction and the peace of mind that the
Department of Defense is very committed to quality and that children who are
in our child-development system receive very high quality care across their
development," Thompson said.

Military families that enroll their children in [Defense
Department]-sponsored child care facilities should know "that your child is
safe and is in a learning environment," Thompson said. Such knowledge, she
added, helps military members focus on their jobs.

Quality child care is important, Thompson said, because the key formative
development years for children takes place between ages 1 through 5.

"When we do the right mix of quality care-giving, learning activities,
opportunities for physical play, ... these children are thriving," she said.

Such an environment "really does set the tone for their future in elementary
school and further on," Thompson said.

Care-givers employed at Defense Department-sponsored child care facilities
receive stringent training and are required to meet the highest standards,
Thompson said.

"We lead the way in the country of setting the standards and oversight of
what constitutes a good early childhood program," Thompson said.