A Mother's Job: The History of Day Care 1890-1960.A Mother's Job: The History of Day Care 1890-1960. By Elizabeth Rose Elizabeth Rose is a Kingston, Tennessee-based teacher, principal, and storyteller. Elizabeth’s stories include a blend of traditional southern folklore, fairy tales, ghost stories, and folktales from around the world.. (New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of : Oxford University Press, 1999. xi plus 275pp.). Americans' ambivalence toward day care forms the starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point terminus a quo commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the of this important study. Tracing the history of day care in Philadelphia from the 1880s to the 1950s, Elizabeth Rose tells a story of both continuity and change, of a growing acceptance of the benefits of early childhood education coexisting co·ex·ist intr.v. co·ex·ist·ed, co·ex·ist·ing, co·ex·ists 1. To exist together, at the same time, or in the same place. 2. with an older association of child care with charity. Ultimately, Rose argues, Americans' ambivalence toward day care is bound up with their contradictory views about mothers working outside the homes. The first half of Taking on a Mother's Job focuses on "Establishing Day Care"; Philadelphia had fifty day nurseries by 1920. Despite their diverse origins in Sunday schools, kindergartens, and social settlements, all day nurseries in Philadelphia had a common purpose: to get the children of working mothers off the streets and into a surrogate home. Considered to be a form of charity, day nurseries were characterized as "foster mothers" for children whose mothers had no choice but to work. Supporters consistently played down the fact that day care enabled women to become breadwinners because they did not want to encourage maternal employment. Instead, they portrayed day nurseries as providing needy children with a home-like setting that was preferable not only to an orphanage ORPHANAGE, Eng. law. By the custom of London, when a freeman of that city dies, his estate is divided into three parts, as follows: one third part to the widow; another, to the children advanced by him in his lifetime, which is called the orphanage; and the other third part may be by him , but even to their own homes. Like most scholars of maternalism and the welfare state, Rose stresses the differences between the elite reformers who founded day nurseries and the women who used them. Unlike maternalists, who saw mothers' employment as an abdication abdication, in a political sense, renunciation of high public office, usually by a monarch. Some abdications have been purely voluntary and resulted in no loss of prestige. of maternal responsibility, working-class mothers saw wage-earning as a means of fulfilling their family obligations. Unlike reformers, who viewed day nurseries as agents of Americanization, immigrant mothers took pride in their own identities. Jews, African-Americans, and Catholics formed their own day nurseries in their own communities. They used other day nurseries only if they had no other choice and kept their children there briefly. (On this point, more might be said about underemployment un·der·em·ployed adj. 1. Employed only part-time when one needs and desires full-time employment. 2. Inadequately employed, especially employed at a low-paying job that requires less skill or training than one possesses. and irregular work schedules, which characterized women's employment in this period.) In the long run, Rose argues, maternalists "ended up reducing the options" available to low-income mothers because of their class bias and conventional views about the home. (p. 9) Two of maternalism's principal accomplishments--the professionalization pro·fes·sion·al·ize tr.v. pro·fes·sion·al·ized, pro·fes·sion·al·iz·ing, pro·fes·sion·al·iz·es To make professional. pro·fes of social work and the enactment of mothers' pension laws--were particularly detrimental to day care. Social workers' emphasis on individual case work limited the number of families who could use day nurseries and underscored their pathologies. Mothers' pensions, by trying at least in theory to keep poor mothers at home with their children, hindered women's efforts to achieve economic self-sufficiency through employment. Rose's use of case records gives readers some feel for life in the day nurseries, but her emphasis is on the discourse on day care. In a revealing comparison of day nurseries and nursery schools, she contrasts the idea of day care as welfare for the poor with day care as education for more affluent children. The growing popularity of nursery schools after the 1920s shows that it was not the group care of young children, but mothers' poverty and employment status that led to the stigma against day nurseries. Nursery schools and day nurseries both presumed that mothers were incompetent to raise children without expert guidance, yet while nursery schools gave affluent children an individualized in·di·vid·u·al·ize tr.v. in·di·vid·u·al·ized, in·di·vid·u·al·iz·ing, in·di·vid·u·al·iz·es 1. To give individuality to. 2. To consider or treat individually; particularize. 3. education, day nurseries provided custodial care Custodial Care Non-medical care that helps individuals with his or her activities of daily living, preparation of special diets and self-administration of medication not requiring constant attention of medical personnel. to the children of the poor. Nevertheless, Rose argues, nursery schools contributed to a more positive view of day care by insisting on the value of early childhood education. The second half of Taking on a Mother's Job examines the small but steady steps toward the acceptance of day care between 1930 and 1960. In the 1930s, WPA WPA: see Work Projects Administration. WPA in full Works Progress Administration later (1939–43) Work Projects Administration U.S. work program for the unemployed. nursery schools, although established to provide work for unemployed teachers, set a precedent for government involvement in child care. The framers of the New Deal never considered day care as a strategy for alleviating economic distress, however. The idea of mothers as providers was too remote. The real watershed in the history of day care came during World War II, when a growing demand for women workers and wartime funding for federal child care programs brought a significant change in attitudes. Most scholars attribute mothers' reluctance to use federal child care centers to their inconvenient locations, high fees, and chaotic organization, but Rose also emphasizes the longstanding association between day care and charity. Still, she points our, protests against the cutoff of federal funds Federal Funds Funds deposited to regional Federal Reserve Banks by commercial banks, including funds in excess of reserve requirements. Notes: These non-interest bearing deposits are lent out at the Fed funds rate to other banks unable to meet overnight reserve after the war reveal that some Philadelphia mothers had come to see day care as a right. Even as popular support for day care increased in the 1940s and 1950s, however, child care advocates frequently used arguments comparable to those of the maternalists who founded private day nurseries at the turn of the century. They played up fears of juvenile crime and welfare dependency, but failed to challenge the belief that mothers worked only out of financial necessity. Rose's thesis about changing ideas about mothers' work is richly argued and convincing; her grounding in local history and the case records of day nurseries complements the national policy focus of scholars like Sonya Michel. That Rose's analysis of "day care as welfare" is sharper than her discussion of "day care as education" is not surprising, given her roots in women's history ''This article is about the history of women. For information on the field of historical study, see Gender history. Women's history is the history of female human beings. Rights and equality Women's rights refers to the social and human rights of women. . Still, this reader would have liked to see more discussion of education and of the impact of changing (and conflicting) ideas about childhood, children's pedagogical ped·a·gog·ic also ped·a·gog·i·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of pedagogy. 2. Characterized by pedantic formality: a haughty, pedagogic manner. and spiritual needs, and--admittedly a much harder task--the children themselves on policies and attitudes toward day care. Overcrowding overcrowding overcrowding of animal accommodation. Many countries now publish codes of practice which define what the appropriate volumetric allowances should be for each species of animal when they are housed indoors. Breaches of these codes is overcrowding. , chronic underfunding, and poor quality may have been a cause as much as an effect of the failure of ordinary Americans to support day care. This richly researched and compelling study deserves to be read by historians and policymakers alike. |
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