Daycare Trust

Daycare Trust is the UK's national childcare charity, campaigning for quality, accessible, affordable childcare for all, and raising the voices of children, parents and carers. Daycare Trust advises parents and carers, providers, employers, trade unions and policymakers on childcare issues.

Daycare Trust was established in 1986 and is headquartered in London. It is a registered charity and company.

History

The concept for Daycare Trust emerged in the 1970s in the context of the growing feminist movement. Many women desired both a family and a work life, but the childcare infrastructure was not in place. Additionally, the 1948 Childrens Act stigmatized parents for "dumping" their children in nurseries, categorizing those children as "at risk" and "maternally deprived."

Activists, mostly women, from various organizations campaigned to establish nurseries in various places, primarily in colleges and universities. From there they tackled the issue of quality, and campaigned for better professional training.

In 1986, a group of these activists established Daycare Trust, creating a unified base of support to carry out the charitable work of the National Childcare Campaign (a coalition of local groups formed in 1980 to campaign for workplace nurseries and better staff training).

1986, year of establishment

Today

Chief executives

Mission

Daycare Trust's mission is to "secure access to high quality affordable childcare for all children in Great Britain where and when they and their parents want and need it, at a price their parents can afford." [1]

The charity defines childcare as "arrangements parents make for their children when they are not looking after the children themselves; this could be in individual or group care in a variety of settings, including at home." [1]

Daycare Trust work includes:

Policy and research

Daycare Trust conducts independent and robust research [2] on behalf of a number of government departments, charities and research councils. This research aims to “further the availability of sustainable, affordable and good quality childcare to all families; offering real choices to families to balance work and family life”.

Daycare Trust provides informed comment on key childcare issues to the media and government, ensuring that the benefits of childcare and the issues faced by parents are well understood.

Information

Daycare Trust’s information services benefit over 450,000 people per year. These services consist of a telephone information line,[3] which provides comprehensive information about childcare to callers; e-mail information service; and [4] with factsheets for parents and employers and an interactive.[5]

Training and consultancy

Daycare Trust runs training and consultancy [6] on a range of topics, from tax credits to involving parents in service development and delivery, to a range of organizations and services.

Policy recommendations

The organisation's current policy priorities are set out in the 2010 publication Childcare Charter,[7] published in the run up to the 2010 general election.

The Childcare Charter called on the next government to:

  1. Aim to spend 1% of GDP on early childhood education and care so that all children get the best start in life
  2. Extend free places to ensure that all children benefit from early childhood education and care
  3. Extend parental leave and make workplaces family-friendly
  4. Fill the gaps in provision and guarantee extended schools
  5. Make childcare affordable for all parents
  6. Celebrate Sure Start Children’s Centres and extend the range of services on offer

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.