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<item>
<title>What Do Great Child Care Providers Do Differently to Build Long-Term Success?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-do-great-child-care-providers-do-differently-to-build-long-term-success.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
High-performing child care programs use small, repeatable daily habits (greeting rituals, protected admin time, micro self‑care, weekly family contacts, prepared activities) combined with leadership systems (clear priorities, PDSA improvement cycles, low‑cost benefits, and transparent career steps) to improve child outcomes, reduce turnover, and sustain quality. Measure a few focused metrics, involve staff in short tests and reviews, and start by trying one micro‑habit, a 5‑minute anonymous staff pulse, and one clear career step this week to begin compounding improvements.
]]></description>
<category>#retention,</category>
<category>#wellbeing,</category>
<category>#culture</category>
<category>#leaders</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#retention</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 20:09:15 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How should I prepare my classroom for cold and flu season beyond cleaning?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-should-i-prepare-my-classroom-for-cold-and-flu-season-beyond-cleaning.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Beyond surface cleaning, prepare for cold and flu season with a layered, written plan that prioritizes improved ventilation and air cleaning, routine supervised hand hygiene and toy sanitizing, vaccination promotion, clear sick‑day and return‑to‑care policies, and consistent family communication. Implement practical steps now—run HVAC/HEPA units and increase outdoor air when safe, schedule and supervise handwashing, use a mouthed‑toy bin, track ventilation actions and absenteeism, provide staff training and supportive sick leave, and consult CDC/ChildCareEd resources and your state licensing agency for specifics.
]]></description>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#handwashing</category>
<category>#ventilation,</category>
<category>#policy</category>
<category>#cleaning/toy</category>
<category>#vaccination</category>
<category>#cleaning</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 20:09:14 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How Can Child Care Providers Stay Organized Without Spending Hours Planning?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-stay-organized-without-spending-hours-planning.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article gives practical, low-effort strategies child care directors and providers can implement immediately to save time, reduce stress, and improve classroom flow by focusing on five priorities—time, planning, organization, routines, and lesson plans. Concrete tips include setting 3–5 daily anchors, planning by blocks, using a weekly "Sunday Basket" and laminated checklists, a 4-part micro-template for lesson plans, child-height labeled storage and visual schedules, repeatable low-prep activities, and short daily admin slots so teams share work and paperwork doesn''t pile up.
]]></description>
<category>#time,</category>
<category>#planning,</category>
<category>#organization,</category>
<category>#routines,</category>
<category>#lessonplans</category>
<category>#routines</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 20:08:06 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How Can We Teach Children the Value of Kindness Through Everyday Moments?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-teach-children-the-value-of-kindness-through-everyday-moments.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article explains how caregivers can embed kindness and empathy into daily routines—meals, transitions, and play—by using simple, evidence-informed strategies like modeling, emotion labels, prompts, role-play, and immediate reinforcement so prosocial behaviors become habitual rather than occasional lessons. It advises training staff on consistent language, partnering with families, tracking a few simple indicators (named kind acts, peer-helping, emotion language), and using free SEL resources and courses to measure and sustain a program-wide culture of kindness.
]]></description>
<category>#kindness</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#empathy?</category>
<category>#children.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 20:07:03 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can we help children learn to wait, take turns, and manage frustration?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-help-children-learn-to-wait-take-turns-and-manage-frustration.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Short, consistent, predictable teaching moments—using simple scripts, visuals and timers, role‑play, brief routines and calming steps (Connect → Calm → Coach)—help young children build waiting, turn‑taking, empathy and self‑regulation by rehearsing phrases, labeling feelings, and reinforcing small wins.  
Give lots of practice through short team games, turn stations, read‑and‑reflect and puppet micro‑lessons; adapt with peer buddies, duplicates and visuals for children who struggle, and align staff and families on tiny measurable goals, weekly observations and consistent scripts to track progress and avoid common pitfalls.
]]></description>
<category>#empathy</category>
<category>#selfregulation</category>
<category>#waiting:</category>
<category>#turns:</category>
<category>#frustration:</category>
<category>#empathy:</category>
<category>#selfregulation:</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 20:07:03 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How do we build trust with families from day one?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-we-build-trust-with-families-from-day-one.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Trust starts at the first interaction and is built by predictable, respectful routines—use a short, consistent welcome plan (greet families by name, a predictable drop‑off ritual, one‑page welcome sheet, 5–10 minute orientation), daily habits (arrival/pick‑up check‑ins, end‑of‑day 3‑bullet notes, photos with permission, weekly summaries), and culturally responsive choices that honor language and family preferences.  
Sustain trust through organizational supports—leadership modeling, staff training and scripts for tough conversations, shared templates and supervision—and take quick actions this week (train greetings, produce welcome sheets in preferred languages, start a simple daily note, role‑play a difficult conversation, and remove one barrier) while following state licensing rules and using multi‑channel communication to meet family preferences.
]]></description>
<category>#trust.</category>
<category>#communication</category>
<category>#12).</category>
<category>#partnership</category>
<category>#partnership.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 20:06:16 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Why Do Predictable Routines Reduce Challenging Behaviors?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/why-do-predictable-routines-reduce-challenging-behaviors.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Predictable daily routines in child care reduce challenging behavior by lowering children''s anxiety, providing clear expectations through visual cues and consistent signals, preventing triggers with balanced schedules, and increasing opportunities for positive reinforcement. Programs should use concrete tools (visual schedules, timers, transition scripts), individualize supports for language and sensory needs, train staff and involve families, collect simple data, and avoid common pitfalls like inconsistency and too many transitions to sustain improvements.
]]></description>
<category>#behavior</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#predictability,</category>
<category>#children.</category>
<category>#transitions.</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#rules</category>
<category>#child</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:54:51 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can I make professional development part of my weekly routine?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-make-professional-development-part-of-my-weekly-routine.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide shows directors and child‑care providers how to make professional development a manageable weekly habit by picking one monthly goal, assigning a short 10–60 minute course, protecting a 20–30 minute paid learning slot, and using a brief 15–20 minute follow‑up or coaching touchpoint to learn → try → reflect → document.  
It also provides simple tracking (paper, cloud, master spreadsheet or admin portal), scheduling and format options, common pitfalls to avoid, and quick-start advice—start this week by choosing one short course, blocking learning time, and scheduling a 15‑minute reflection so staff apply new strategies, improve child outcomes, and stay audit-ready.
]]></description>
<category>#professionaldevelopment</category>
<category>#retention—small</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#weekly</category>
<category>#coaching</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:54:11 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can child care providers support children through big changes like new siblings, divorce, or moving?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-support-children-through-big-changes-like-new-siblings-divorce-or-moving.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Child care providers can buffer children’s stress during major life changes (new siblings, parental separation, moving) by prioritizing predictable routines, relationship-based supports, simple regulation tools, and close, strengths-based partnership with families to maintain safety and teach coping skills. The article gives practical, evidence-informed steps—checklists, age-appropriate strategies, communication scripts, and guidance on when to seek extra help—so programs can implement immediate classroom practices and build long-term resilience while avoiding common pitfalls.
]]></description>
<category>#resilience.</category>
<category>#routines).</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#families).</category>
<category>#resilience</category>
<category>#transitions</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:53:44 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>What Should Every Child Care Provider Know About Decision Fatigue?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-should-every-child-care-provider-know-about-decision-fatigue.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Decision fatigue in child care—diminished willpower, irritability, inconsistent responses, and missed safety or documentation steps—results from accumulated micro-decisions and undermines children’s learning, staff well‑being, retention, and overall program quality.  
Programs can prevent and reduce it by redesigning routines and environments (checklists, visual schedules, decision stations), using shared scripts and limited-choice responses, batching administrative tasks, protecting breaks and rotating high-decision duties, training staff regularly, and tracking bottlenecks so leaders change systems rather than expecting individuals to cope alone.
]]></description>
<category>#decisionfatigue</category>
<category>#stress</category>
<category>#selfcare</category>
<category>#routines,</category>
<category>#choices.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:53:27 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can we encourage curiosity instead of simply giving answers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-encourage-curiosity-instead-of-simply-giving-answers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article urges early childhood leaders to move from giving answers to guiding inquiry, offering practical, research‑informed strategies—teacher phrases, routines, space design, family partnerships, staff coaching, and documentation—to foster curiosity and support cognitive, social‑emotional, and language development. It lists concrete, immediately usable moves (daily quick questions, curated provocations and tools, observation checklists, simple documentation, and common‑mistake fixes) so classrooms become predictable, coachable environments where children lead with wonder.
]]></description>
<category>#educators,</category>
<category>#curiosity</category>
<category>#questions</category>
<category>#inquiry</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#educators</category>
<category>#children.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:53:03 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<item>
<title>How can I create a classroom where every child feels heard?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-create-a-classroom-where-every-child-feels-heard.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Creating a classroom where every child feels heard is both a moral imperative and a practical strategy that improves engagement, reduces behavior problems, supports equity for dual-language and trauma-affected children, and strengthens family partnerships.  
Put listening into daily routines with short consistent scripts and active listening (get down to the child’s level, reflect and label, ask one question with wait time), design inclusive environments using UDL, visual schedules, calm corners and multimodal sharing, coach staff, track simple indicators, partner with families, and refer or screen when concerns persist using evidence-based CSEFEL/CDC/ChildCareEd resources.
]]></description>
<category>#children-centered</category>
<category>#2).</category>
<category>#belonging,</category>
<category>#12).</category>
<category>#13).</category>
<category>#listening</category>
<category>#inclusion.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:53:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can we help children build confidence without overpraising them?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-help-children-build-confidence-without-overpraising-them.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Replace generic praise with specific, process-focused encouragement that describes observable behavior, highlights effort or strategy, and invites reflection so children develop intrinsic motivation, persistence, and resilience. Implement predictable routines, scaffolded tasks, low-stakes retries, consistent staff-family language, and simple feedback scripts to teach self-monitoring and sustain authentic confidence without fostering dependence on adult approval.
]]></description>
<category>#confidence.</category>
<category>#confidence</category>
<category>#praise</category>
<category>#encouragement</category>
<category>#effort</category>
<category>#growth.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:52:55 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can I create classroom traditions that children remember for years?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-create-classroom-traditions-that-children-remember-for-years.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Classroom traditions are predictable, sensory-rich rituals that build attachment, belonging, and long-term memory—design them simple (2–3 repeatable steps), consistent, documented, and co-created with children and families while honoring cultural representation and safety/licensing requirements. Start small, assign roles, rehearse and measure impact with short observations, family feedback, and brief staff reflection (expect ~3–6 weeks for routines to stick), and iterate to keep traditions meaningful without tokenizing or overcomplicating.
]]></description>
<category>#traditions</category>
<category>#community.</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:52:37 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can everyday routines be turned into intentional learning opportunities?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-everyday-routines-be-turned-into-intentional-learning-opportunities.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Everyday childcare routines — from diapering and snack to arrival and clean-up — can be intentionally used as short, repeatable learning moments by observing children''s cues, embedding language and literacy practices, and designing predictable transitions and environments that promote independence. Implementing these changes requires simple tools (visuals, labels, helper roles), staff coaching, family engagement, and brief observation-based measurement to sustain practice and amplify language, social, and cognitive development.
]]></description>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#literacy</category>
<category>#learning</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:51:32 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>How Can We Teach Patience in a World of Instant Gratification?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-teach-patience-in-a-world-of-instant-gratification.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Teaching patience is a learnable, evidence-based skill tied to self-regulation and long-term outcomes, and educators can build it through predictable routines, incremental waits, clear scripts, brief mindfulness, games, concrete timers, and family partnerships. Start small—practice one daily wait, teach a simple waiting script, use games and take-home tools, avoid punitive responses, provide individualized supports, and track progress so waiting becomes a practiced, supported classroom habit.
]]></description>
<category>#educators.</category>
<category>#selfcontrol,</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#patience.</category>
<category>#patience</category>
<category>#mindfulness—that</category>
<category>#selfcontrol.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:51:27 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Why do children need more boredom and less constant entertainment?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/why-do-children-need-more-boredom-and-less-constant-entertainment.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Occasional unstructured, low-stimulation downtime fosters children''s creativity, problem-solving, and self-regulation by engaging default-mode brain networks and encouraging self-initiated play, while constant entertainment and excessive screens blunt attention and increase emotional reactivity. Child-care providers can build tolerance for boredom and strengthen executive function by implementing short, scaffolded quiet blocks, open-ended materials and toy rotation, simple coping scripts, planned transitions, and clear communication with families.
]]></description>
<category>#boredom</category>
<category>#creativity</category>
<category>#screens</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#selfregulation</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:51:01 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>What small changes make child care classrooms feel more welcoming?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-small-changes-make-child-care-classrooms-feel-more-welcoming.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Small, intentional, low-cost changes—like a welcoming entry with family photos, low shelves and clear bins, a calm cozy corner, representative books/toys, and clear visual schedules—can immediately make child care classrooms feel more inviting while supporting self-regulation and belonging. Coupled with warm, predictable adult interactions, consistent routines, and simple universal-design tweaks (sensory options, clear traffic paths, multilingual labels), these practices boost family partnership, reduce stress, and increase participation; try quick experiments this week (welcome basket, calm corner, visual schedule) and iterate based on what you observe.
]]></description>
<category>#welcoming,</category>
<category>#inclusive</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#12).</category>
<category>#welcoming.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:50:59 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>How can the first 30 minutes set your classroom up for a successful day?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-the-first-30-minutes-set-your-classroom-up-for-a-successful-day.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The first 30 minutes of the classroom day set the tone and are a high-impact opportunity to build safety, connection, and instructional time by using a simple, repeatable flow: a brief pre-open checklist, greeted arrival and health check (0–10 min), independent calm choices (10–20 min), and a short welcome circle with a visual “now/next” schedule and cues to reduce stress and support separation.  
Practical steps for staff include staging two calm centers, posting staffing and family notes, using consistent greeting/exit scripts, one-step job cards, visual timers, and taught calm-corner routines, while avoiding common mistakes (no pre-setup, inconsistent messages, misusing calm spaces); implement one change per week and brief coaching to produce calmer days, stronger family partnerships, and more time for teaching.
]]></description>
<category>#first30minutes</category>
<category>#morning</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#children</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 19:50:03 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can structure and movement help children with ADHD thrive in your classroom?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-structure-and-movement-help-children-with-adhd-thrive-in-your-classroom.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article outlines practical, evidence-informed strategies for supporting young children with ADHD by combining predictable, visual structure (simple routines, picture schedules, brief task steps, consistent transition cues, and immediate feedback) with intentional movement (short frequent brain breaks, desk cycles, heavy work, and outdoor gross-motor play) to reduce stress and improve attention. It recommends implementing one change at a time, tracking outcomes, training staff and families, avoiding common pitfalls (inconsistent responses, using movement only as a reward), and seeking formal supports (FBA/IPBS, 504/IEP, or specialist involvement) when behaviors are dangerous or do not improve.
]]></description>
<category>#ADHD</category>
<category>#structure</category>
<category>#movement.</category>
<category>#movement</category>
<category>#selfregulation</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:06:05 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can we include children with physical disabilities in daily activities?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-include-children-with-physical-disabilities-in-daily-activities.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Including children with physical disabilities in daily activities is both an ethical and practical imperative, achievable by adapting routines, materials, environments, and using assistive technology so every child can participate meaningfully. Work collaboratively with families and specialists, trial evidence-informed adaptations (visual schedules, task analysis, accessible layouts, AT), train staff, and document outcomes to create scalable, state-compliant inclusion that builds competence, belonging, and safety.
]]></description>
<category>#inclusion,</category>
<category>#accessibility,</category>
<category>#adaptations</category>
<category>#assistivetech</category>
<category>#participation.</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-include-children-with-physical-disabilities-in-daily-activities.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:05:15 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare programs effectively support children with autism?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-programs-effectively-support-children-with-autism.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Childcare programs can effectively support children with autism by using low-cost, evidence-informed strategies—predictable visual routines, sensory-smart calming spaces, multimodal communication supports, scaffolded play, and brief data-driven trials—that normalize tools for all children and reduce anxiety and exclusion. Partner with families and specialists through strengths-based, time-limited plans, measure progress on one clear target to iterate supports, teach tools proactively, and seek extra help when there is self-injury, frequent meltdowns, or rapid behavioral change.
]]></description>
<category>#autism</category>
<category>#inclusion,</category>
<category>#communication,</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#play.</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-programs-effectively-support-children-with-autism.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:04:55 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care providers recognize early signs of developmental delays?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-recognize-early-signs-of-developmental-delays.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical guide helps child care providers recognize early signs of developmental delays by observing behaviors across five domains, using validated milestone checklists (CDC/ChildCareEd/ASQ), documenting objective examples, and knowing red flags (e.g., loss of skills, no babbling by 12 months, no words by 18 months) to decide when to screen or refer to early intervention.  
It also recommends family-centered communication—start with strengths, share notes and checklist results, offer referrals and support—and classroom strategies (small measurable goals, adapted activities, sensory options), track progress, and check state requirements to ensure timely support without labeling.
]]></description>
<category>#developmental</category>
<category>#milestones</category>
<category>#earlyintervention</category>
<category>#documentation</category>
<category>#parents.</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-recognize-early-signs-of-developmental-delays.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:04:47 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can early childhood classrooms become more sensory-friendly?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-early-childhood-classrooms-become-more-sensory-friendly.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Simple, low-cost environmental changes (lighting, noise control, predictable schedules, cozy corners) plus sensory breaks and tools can reduce meltdowns, boost attention, and make classrooms more inclusive for children with varied sensory needs. Teams should observe and document patterns, partner with families, individualize supports, practice and coach routines, use safe/no-cost activities, and refer to specialists when classroom strategies don''t help while following licensing and safety rules.
]]></description>
<category>#stress</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#regulation</category>
<category>#play</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-early-childhood-classrooms-become-more-sensory-friendly.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:04:43 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs create inclusive classrooms for children of all abilities?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-create-inclusive-classrooms-for-children-of-all-abilities.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article gives practical, numbered steps for making early childhood classrooms truly inclusive—covering room design (clear pathways, calm corners, accessible materials, visual supports), teaching practices (UDL, predictable routines, multiple representations, sensory breaks), and family/specialist partnerships (listening, shared goals, brief reviews, and referral guidance). It also recommends simple measurement and staff-development approaches (track engagement, transitions, family feedback; use small iterative changes and coaching) and offers three quick starters: post a picture schedule, create a calm corner, and provide two ways to join one group activity.
]]></description>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#child.</category>
<category>#empathy,</category>
<category>#child</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:04:31 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can we effectively teach children to wait, share, and take turns?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-effectively-teach-children-to-wait-share-and-take-turns.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Teaching children to wait, share, and take turns is essential for social-emotional development and smoother classroom routines, and is most effective when taught with short, repeated, respectful practices using simple scripts, visible timers, turn cards, and predictable routines. Staff should prompt → practice → praise, use Connect → Calm → Coach for conflicts, provide tailored supports (priming, role-play, peer buddies, environmental adaptations), partner with families, and avoid forcing or lengthy lectures to build lasting cooperative skills.
]]></description>
<category>#empathy</category>
<category>#sharing</category>
<category>#turns</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#children)</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:04:25 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can Visual Supports Improve Behavior and Routines in Early Childhood Programs?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-visual-supports-improve-behavior-and-routines-in-early-childhood-programs.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Visual supports—simple pictures, photos, timers, or object cues—are low‑cost, high‑impact tools that reduce confusion, lower anxiety and challenging behavior, speed transitions, and increase engagement, independence, and inclusion for young children, especially those with communication, sensory, or attention differences. Practical implementation includes choosing whole‑day or task‑specific schedules, using authentic photos or 1–3 step charts, selecting a consistent format and cue, teaching and practicing with staff and families, personalizing and adapting supports for diverse learners, monitoring and tweaking use (and checking state licensing), and consulting inclusion specialists if behaviors persist.
]]></description>
<category>#visuals</category>
<category>#schedules</category>
<category>#transitions,</category>
<category>#independence,</category>
<category>#inclusion</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-visual-supports-improve-behavior-and-routines-in-early-childhood-programs.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:03:59 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How do you create behavior support plans that focus on teaching skills?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-you-create-behavior-support-plans-that-focus-on-teaching-skills.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Skill-focused Behavior Support Plans shift the emphasis from punishment to teaching by using functional assessment to identify the behavior''s function, selecting easy, developmentally appropriate replacement skills that match that function, and providing systematic teaching, prompting, and reinforcement so the new skill becomes more effective than the problem behavior.  
They work best with team-based implementation across settings (staff, families, consultants), simple one-page tools and consistent data tracking for progress monitoring, and iterative adjustments—start with a one-week ABC observation, a one-page Mini BSP, frequent reinforcement, and weekly review to achieve durable, inclusive outcomes.
]]></description>
<category>#skills</category>
<category>#10).</category>
<category>#behavior,</category>
<category>#skills,</category>
<category>#children,</category>
<category>#families,</category>
<category>#inclusion</category>
<category>#skill,</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#11).</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:03:53 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can Child Care Providers Avoid Power Struggles with Young Children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-avoid-power-struggles-with-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Reducing power struggles with young children involves preventing triggers through predictable routines, visual schedules, and transition supports; offering limited, safe choices and brief, respectful language; and using a simple 4‑step in‑the‑moment script (regulate, acknowledge, limit, replace) to de‑escalate and teach replacement skills. Consistent staff practices, family partnership, short written plans and data collection for persistent patterns improve safety, increase learning time, and support staff morale while avoiding long lectures, bribery, or inconsistent responses.
]]></description>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#powerstruggles;</category>
<category>#powerstruggles—practice</category>
<category>#routines,</category>
<category>#choices,</category>
<category>#relationships</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 15:03:48 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can we build emotional vocabulary through books and play?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-build-emotional-vocabulary-through-books-and-play.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article explains how deliberate read‑alouds paired with playful, low‑pressure activities (like emotion sorting and role play) help young children notice and name feelings, choose calming or problem‑solving responses, and strengthen regulation, empathy, and classroom readiness. It offers classroom‑ready protocols (predict/pause/label/connect), age‑adaptations, family partnership steps, quick ways to measure progress, common pitfalls to avoid, and links to resources such as CSEFEL and ChildCareEd for tools and printables.
]]></description>
<category>#emotional</category>
<category>#vocabulary</category>
<category>#books</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#children.</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-build-emotional-vocabulary-through-books-and-play.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 14:54:40 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How should child care providers respond to biting, hitting, and aggressive behavior?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-should-child-care-providers-respond-to-biting-hitting-and-aggressive-behavior.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
When children bite, hit, or act aggressively, prioritize safety and dignity with immediate calm limits and care—comfort the injured child, give a brief neutral limit to the actor, document the incident, and teach one simple replacement skill in the moment.  
Prevent repeats by changing triggers and routines, using consistent staff-family scripts and reinforcement, tracking ABC data to spot patterns, and bringing in mental health or specialist supports when behavior is frequent, severe, or not improving.
]]></description>
<category>#biting,</category>
<category>#hitting,</category>
<category>#aggression,</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#prevention.</category>
<category>#aggression</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 14:52:16 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can Redirection Replace Punishment in Early Childhood Settings?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-redirection-replace-punishment-in-early-childhood-settings.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Redirection—using brief, calm limits plus immediate, teachable alternatives—preserves adult-child relationships, stops unsafe behavior quickly, and supports long-term skill development when combined with prevention, consistent staff language, and predictable routines. The article offers practical one-line scripts, teaching steps, visuals, rollout actions, tracking tools, and guidance on when to document and seek specialist help so teams can start replacing punishment with redirection this week.
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#children,</category>
<category>#classroom,</category>
<category>#teachers.</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-redirection-replace-punishment-in-early-childhood-settings.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 14:51:38 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How does room arrangement shape behavior, engagement, supervision, and learning?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-does-room-arrangement-shape-behavior-engagement-supervision-and-learning.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Thoughtful room arrangement in early childhood programs—clear zones, child-height access, low shelves, well-defined centers, calm colors, and good sight-lines—actively shapes children''s behavior, boosts engagement and learning, and enables safer, more effective supervision. Practical, research-informed steps (quick fixes, a 4-week plan, active supervision strategies, rotating displays, and simple assessment measures) help teams implement changes, avoid common pitfalls (over-decorated walls, too many toys, blocked sight-lines), and iteratively measure gains while complying with state licensing.
]]></description>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#learning,</category>
<category>#supervision,</category>
<category>#engagement.</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-does-room-arrangement-shape-behavior-engagement-supervision-and-learning.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 14:32:09 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why do children repeat activities and how does repetition support brain development?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/why-do-children-repeat-activities-and-how-does-repetition-support-brain-development.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Repetition — from repeating words to rebuilding block towers — is a primary engine of learning that strengthens synapses, integrates multisensory experience, and, when spaced and patterned, converts short-term practice into durable language, motor, social, and self-regulation skills. Practitioners should plan short, frequent, scaffolded, multisensory repeats (varying one element each time), embed them in routines, document progress for targeted children, and partner with families or refer for screening when repetition is rigid, nonfunctional, or shows no developmental growth.
]]></description>
<category>#repetition</category>
<category>#brain</category>
<category>#play-rich</category>
<category>#language</category>
<category>#language,</category>
<category>#development,</category>
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<guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.childcareed.com/a/why-do-children-repeat-activities-and-how-does-repetition-support-brain-development.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 14:31:06 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>$200 Off 45-Hour Online/Self-Paced Course</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/coupon-200OFF45-200-off-45-hour-online-self-paced-course.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[Save $50 on required 45-hour certification courses to advance your career as a lead teacher.
What the discount applies to: 45-hour Growth and Development, 45-Hour Infant and Toddler Curriculum, 45 Hours Director-Administration ONLINE, 
45-Hour Coaching and Mentoring, 45-Hour Preschool Curriculum, or 45-Hour School Age Curriculum.
No code needed—your discount applies automatically when eligible course(s) are in your cart.]]></description>
<category>coupons</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 12:39:11 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="info@childcareed.com">info@childcareed.com</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can educators create SMART goals for teaching, classroom management, family engagement, and career growth?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-educators-create-smart-goals-for-teaching-classroom-management-family-engagement-and-career-growth.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical guide shows educators how to write and implement SMART goals across teaching, classroom management, family engagement, and career growth by using observation-based baselines, measurable targets, time-bound checkpoints, and aligned professional development and coaching so goals become routine rather than paperwork. It includes concrete examples, implementation steps, tracking tools, inclusive adaptations, and common pitfalls to avoid—encouraging short coaching cycles, family partnership, credential-linked career goals, and program-level monitoring while reminding leaders to check state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#SMARTgoals</category>
<category>#teaching,</category>
<category>#classroom,</category>
<category>#families,</category>
<category>#career.</category>
<category>#teaching</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#career</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 21:22:26 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How do singing, rhythm, movement and musical play support language, memory and social development in young children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-singing-rhythm-movement-and-musical-play-support-language-memory-and-social-development-in-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Singing, rhythm, movement and musical play—when used as short, repeated, active, and inclusive routines—support young children’s language, phonological awareness, working memory, attention, and social-emotional skills by providing predictable linguistic frames, rhythmic entrainment, and multisensory encoding. Practical, low-prep strategies (short songs, chants, body percussion, call-and-response, movement bursts) that prioritize participation over passive listening and include simple adaptations for diverse learners produce measurable near-transfer benefits for classroom routines, vocabulary, sequencing and peer cooperation when implemented intentionally and consistently.
]]></description>
<category>#music</category>
<category>#movement</category>
<category>#language,</category>
<category>#memory,</category>
<category>#social</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 21:22:00 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs prevent seasonal safety hazards like heat, cold, allergies, holiday risks, and outdoor play dangers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-prevent-seasonal-safety-hazards-like-heat-cold-allergies-holiday-risks-and-outdoor-play-dangers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical, evidence-informed guide outlines how child care programs can prevent seasonal safety hazards—heat, cold, allergies, holiday risks, and general outdoor-play dangers—by using short, repeatable routines, checklists, staff training, clear family communication, and compliance with state licensing rules.  
Key actions include posting one-page weather decision charts, scheduling hydration and warm-up breaks, enforcing layered clothing and playground inspections, standardizing allergy intake and epinephrine protocols with trained staff, running quick drills, logging checks and near-misses, and appointing safety leads to approve decorations and med storage.
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#outdoor</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#heat</category>
<category>#allergies</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 21:21:48 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can directors create supportive workplace cultures and practical wellness strategies for educators?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-directors-create-supportive-workplace-cultures-and-practical-wellness-strategies-for-educators.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article offers evidence-informed, low-cost daily wellness tactics (micro-breaks, end-of-day wins, movement, peer check-ins, protected planning time), paired professional development (microlearning + coaching, mentoring, brief mindfulness), and operational changes (float pools, reduced paperwork, scheduled coverage, and a small set of weekly metrics) that directors can implement quickly to reduce educator stress and burnout. It also emphasizes building a culture of caring through leadership modeling, staff co-design, regular rituals, measurable goals, and avoiding one-off or one-size-fits-all fixes to improve retention and program stability.
]]></description>
<category>#wellbeing</category>
<category>#retention;</category>
<category>#wellbeing,</category>
<category>#retention,</category>
<category>#leadership,</category>
<category>#burnout,</category>
<category>#educators.Directors</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 21:21:08 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can providers coach children through frustration, mistakes, and challenges using developmentally appropriate language?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-providers-coach-children-through-frustration-mistakes-and-challenges-using-developmentally-appropriate-language.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article gives child care providers concrete, developmentally appropriate coaching language and routines—short scripts (notice → name → boundary → replacement), a three‑step micro‑routine (Connect → Calm → Coach), and room systems (visual schedules, calm corners, calm kits)—to teach preschoolers to manage frustration, learn from mistakes, and try again. 
It also stresses staff alignment, family partnership, regular practice and data‑tracking, and clear thresholds for seeking extra help when behavior is frequent, unsafe, or unresponsive to consistent coaching.
]]></description>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#frustration,</category>
<category>#growth</category>
<category>#children</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 21:20:58 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can blocks, water play, cooking, and outdoor exploration introduce STEM to young children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-blocks-water-play-cooking-and-outdoor-exploration-introduce-stem-to-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Blocks, water play, cooking, and outdoor exploration turn everyday materials into rich, research‑informed STEM learning opportunities by inviting design thinking, measurement, experimentation, and observation through open‑ended challenges and teacher prompts. Use low‑prep invitations with 3–6 materials, clear adult moves, simple documentation (photo + quote), safety rules, weekly rotations, and inclusive scaffolds to scaffold inquiry and avoid common pitfalls.
]]></description>
<category>#STEM</category>
<category>#Water</category>
<category>#measurement).</category>
<category>#play.</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 21:20:45 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can storage, labeling, and daily routines make my classroom more efficient?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-storage-labeling-and-daily-routines-make-my-classroom-more-efficient.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Organizing storage, using clear picture-plus-word labels, and embedding predictable daily routines reduces transitions, behavior challenges, and prep time so staff can teach more and children become more independent. Practical steps include child-height shelving and trays, limited-choice rotation, laminated photo labels, 10–15 minute daily resets with rotating helper jobs, a staged staff-and-family rollout, and checking state licensing before changing fixtures.
]]></description>
<category>#storage,</category>
<category>#labeling,</category>
<category>#routines,</category>
<category>#classroom,</category>
<category>#efficiency</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 21:20:41 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care leaders and providers use self-care, stress management, and work–life balance strategies to stay healthy and effective?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-leaders-and-providers-use-self-care-stress-management-and-work-life-balance-strategies-to-stay-healthy-and-effective.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical guide explains why self-care, stress management, and work–life balance are essential for early childhood staff and program quality, offering evidence-based micro-habits (breathing, micro-breaks, hydration, peer check-ins, sleep hygiene), a simple action flow for spotting and addressing burnout, and common pitfalls to avoid.  
It also gives program-level steps for leaders—create coverage/float staff, reduce paperwork, protect non-contact hours, run brief pulse surveys, provide targeted supports and training—and points to resources (ChildCareEd, HHS, NIOSH, CDC) to implement and measure sustainable changes.
]]></description>
<category>#selfcare</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:53:18 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs balance screen time, educational technology, and active-learning alternatives?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-balance-screen-time-educational-technology-and-active-learning-alternatives.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guidance recommends minimizing passive screen time in early childhood—avoiding screens for infants, allowing only co-viewed short clips for toddlers, and limiting preschool group viewing to 10–20 minutes—while making educational technology teacher-facing, purposeful, and always paired with immediate hands-on, movement, or play-based extensions. Programs should train staff, use simple logs and checklists to monitor screen minutes and follow-up activities, and partner with families through a brief media plan, demos, and clear policies to protect sleep, language, and active learning while using devices as instructional tools rather than babysitters.
]]></description>
<category>#activelearning</category>
<category>#educationaltechnology</category>
<category>#screentime</category>
<category>#educators</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#playbased</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:50:41 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can seasonal activities (spring, summer, fall, winter) combine fun with clear educational goals?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-seasonal-activities-spring-summer-fall-winter-combine-fun-with-clear-educational-goals.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Seasonal activities for spring, summer, fall, and winter use natural learning hooks and low‑prep, classroom‑tested invitations (e.g., planting, scavenger hunts, water science, leaf sorting, ice investigations) to build measurable skills across language, STEM, sensory, gross motor, and social‑emotional domains while pointing to ready resources.  
To implement well, set 1–2 clear learning objectives per activity, run short rotating stations, enforce supervision and safety plans, document learning for families and licensing, and avoid common pitfalls like overpacked days by following a simple planning and staffing checklist.
]]></description>
<category>#preschoolers.</category>
<category>#STEM,</category>
<category>#sensory,</category>
<category>#outdoor</category>
<category>#seasons</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#STEM</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:50:17 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care providers teach hands-on STEAM with everyday materials?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-teach-hands-on-steam-with-everyday-materials.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical guide shows how preschool providers can deliver hands-on, developmentally appropriate STEAM using low-cost everyday and recycled materials by providing a short rationale, ready-to-run activities, setup and safety strategies, teacher moves for richer learning, quick documentation and assessment tips, and common pitfalls to avoid. It lists simple invitations (color mixing, sink-or-float, ramps, frozen toy rescue, seed sprouting, magnets, recycled builds, etc.), supervision and assessment practices, and a four-step action plan so teams can implement repeatable, equitable STEAM experiences immediately.
]]></description>
<category>#STEAM</category>
<category>#preschool</category>
<category>#handsOn,</category>
<category>#everyday</category>
<category>#materials.</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:47:31 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>What should providers expect at different ages and when should they recommend further evaluation?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-should-providers-expect-at-different-ages-and-when-should-they-recommend-further-evaluation.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Providers in early care and education should use age-band milestones, standardized tools (CDC/ChildCareEd checklists), precise documentation, and strengths-based family conversations to monitor development because early identification and timely screening/referral to pediatricians or early intervention improve outcomes.  
Recognize urgent red flags (e.g., no babbling by 12 months, no single words by 16 months, no two-word phrases by 24 months, any regression, or multiple-domain delays), document concretely, suggest screenings (ASQ, PEDS, M-CHAT) or referrals per state rules, and continue classroom supports and staff training while following up with families.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#home.</category>
<category>#earlyintervention.</category>
<category>#developmental</category>
<category>#milestones</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#earlyintervention</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:47:17 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Which activities and routines best help children develop empathy, self-regulation, and resilience?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/which-activities-and-routines-best-help-children-develop-empathy-self-regulation-and-resilience.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article recommends using short, predictable, repeated routines and micro-activities—such as morning feelings check-ins, story-based perspective prompts, transition games, brief breath breaks, rotating helper jobs, and simple mindfulness exercises—to build preschoolers'' empathy, self-regulation, and resilience. It emphasizes team consistency, family partnership, trauma-informed practice, monitoring and escalation when needed, and starting small (pick 1–2 routines) while using ChildCareEd and CSEFEL resources for tools and training.
]]></description>
<category>#empathy,</category>
<category>#selfregulation,</category>
<category>#resilience,</category>
<category>#routines,</category>
<category>#mindfulness</category>
<category>#selfregulation.</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:45:40 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care providers communicate effectively, manage hard conversations, and boost family involvement?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-communicate-effectively-manage-hard-conversations-and-boost-family-involvement.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Strong family–provider relationships are essential for quality early childhood care, so programs should adopt a program-wide plan that standardizes respectful, timely communication (multiple channels, shared norms, documentation), uses simple tools and routines (daily WIN updates, communication logs, secure apps, and structured conference forms), and tracks success with participation, frequency of positive messages, family feedback, and child outcome indicators.  
Prepare for difficult conversations with objective observations and a strengths-first script, manage emotion and language access, document follow-ups, and foster meaningful family engagement by offering choices, easy at‑home activities, reduced barriers, feedback loops, and low-effort first steps like sending a positive note or adopting a short daily update template.
]]></description>
<category>#communication,</category>
<category>#families,</category>
<category>#parents</category>
<category>#partnerships</category>
<category>#children.</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:45:35 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can we encourage good behavior while building children&#039;&#039;s confidence and emotional skills?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-encourage-good-behavior-while-building-children-s-confidence-and-emotional-skills.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Integrating proactive classroom structure (visual schedules, balanced routines, capacity limits, simple positively worded rules) with daily SEL practices (emotion-focused books, calm corners, replacement skills, specific praise) and data-driven adjustments prevents challenging behavior and builds children''s self-regulation, confidence, and peer skills.  
Calm, respectful in-the-moment responses (label feelings, state limits, offer choices), effort-focused praise, and consistent family–team partnerships using small, measurable strategies—and escalating to formal PBS/CSEFEL/Pyramid Model supports when needed—produce lasting gains and reduce staff burnout while aligning with state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#confidence</category>
<category>#emotional</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#confidence.</category>
<category>#behavior</category>
<category>#behavior.</category>
<category>#emotions,</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:45:17 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can We Teach Young Children About Community Helpers and Work?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-teach-young-children-about-community-helpers-and-work.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide gives child-care providers practical, developmentally appropriate strategies—short anchor prompts, picture books, dramatic-play materials, SEL scaffolds, family and community outreach, safety and permission templates, and ready-to-use low-cost activities and printables—to teach young children about community helpers.  
It emphasizes starting small (one to two helpers per week), using adult-guided pretend play to build vocabulary, empathy, responsibility, and executive-function skills, simple strengths-based assessment (participation, vocabulary, cooperative play), cultural responsiveness, and adherence to state licensing and safety requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#community</category>
<category>#helpers</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#learning</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#play-based</category>
<category>#families.Start</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:12:20 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs prevent drowning and keep water play safe?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-prevent-drowning-and-keep-water-play-safe.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Water play is joyful but poses high drowning risk for young children, so child care programs should use layered protections — four-sided barriers, distraction-free "water watcher" supervision with touch supervision for toddlers, U.S. Coast Guard–approved life jackets, swim lessons as a supplement (not a replacement for supervision), and staff trained in pediatric CPR/First Aid — along with clear staffing roles, accessible emergency equipment (AED, reach/throw tools, charged phone), and a one-page posted water-play plan.  
Programs should rehearse short seasonal drills, use brief pre/during/post checklists, log near-misses, communicate policies and permissions with families, and follow state licensing requirements so every staff member knows the numbered emergency roles and routines to act quickly and consistently.
]]></description>
<category>#drowning</category>
<category>#waterplay</category>
<category>#supervision,</category>
<category>#supervision</category>
<category>#CPR</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#children</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:11:52 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How do I build a fall routine that actually sticks in my classroom?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-build-a-fall-routine-that-actually-sticks-in-my-classroom.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
A predictable, flexible fall routine—built around one simple seasonal anchor and a steady daily order—reduces children''s anxiety, increases teaching time, and builds independence by using mapped anchors, short realistic transitions, child-level visuals, and 3–5 monthly routine goals.  
Make it stick by rehearsing with staff, using a single cue and micro-practice, giving specific praise, sending brief family notes, posting a 3-step substitute cheat-sheet, adapting for individual needs, reviewing weekly, avoiding too many simultaneous changes, and expecting reliable habits in about 2–4 weeks.
]]></description>
<category>#routine</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#confidence</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:11:51 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can we ease separation anxiety when routines change?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-ease-separation-anxiety-when-routines-change.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
When room, schedule, or staffing changes increase separation distress, use short, consistent classroom-ready steps—warm greeting by name, a 15–60 second practiced goodbye ritual, one small comfort item, immediate low-demand arrival activities, and brief policy‑friendly family check‑ins—to reduce upset and speed settling.  
Partner with families and staff using pre-change visual schedules and a one-page welcome, teach and practice the ritual, train staff for consistent responses, track simple data with measurable goals to monitor progress, and refer to pediatric or child‑mental‑health professionals if anxiety persists while following state licensing and privacy rules.
]]></description>
<category>#providers,</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#toddlers</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#families.</category>
<category>#routines,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:11:10 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs build reliable sun safety routines with sunscreen, hats, and shade?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-build-reliable-sun-safety-routines-with-sunscreen-hats-and-shade.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Child care programs can build reliable sun-safety routines by layering protections—accessible shade, UPF clothing and wide-brim hats, and regular application of broad-spectrum sunscreen (SPF 30 recommended)—along with smart scheduling to avoid peak UV, hydration and heat monitoring, and staff training on safe application and heat-illness recognition.  
Back these practices with written parental permission and medication protocols, documented application logs, fragrance-free options for sensitivities, shade planning, and standardized forms/checklists to meet licensing and public-health guidance while reducing liability and supporting quality outdoor learning.
]]></description>
<category>#sun</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#sunsafety</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:10:57 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can Child Care Programs Best Prepare Little Ones for the Kindergarten Transition?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-best-prepare-little-ones-for-the-kindergarten-transition.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Child care programs can ease kindergarten transitions by using short, daily routines (read-alouds, SEL games, self-help practice, transition scripts, motor play), partnering with families and schools through simple one-page communications, visits, and strengths-based conversations, and screening early with clear documentation and timely referrals for concerns. Emphasize small predictable practices over academic pressure, avoid common pitfalls (long lists, delayed action, using calm spaces punitively), and use available resources (ChildCareEd, CDC, NORC) while checking state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#readiness</category>
<category>#classroom.</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#transitions</category>
<category>#kindergarten</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:10:50 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Listos para Kindergarten: Estrategias para Programas de Cuidado Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-preparar-mejor-a-los-ni-os-peque-os-para-la-transici-n-al-kindergarten.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo ofrece estrategias prácticas y basadas en evidencia para facilitar la transición al kindergarten mediante rutinas cortas y repetidas (lectura, habilidades socioemocionales, autonomía, motricidad y prácticas de transición), apoyos visuales y documentación breve para compartir con las familias. También recomienda construir asociaciones con familias y escuelas mediante comunicaciones claras, visitas y acuerdos administrativos, detectar y documentar preocupaciones tempranas para derivar cuando sea necesario, y evitar errores comunes como priorizar solo lo académico o retrasar intervenciones.
]]></description>
<category>#readiness</category>
<category>#classroom.</category>
<category>#classroom,</category>
<category>#families,</category>
<category>#transitions</category>
<category>#kindergarten</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:10:50 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs run fun, safe summer sensory activities for every age?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-run-fun-safe-summer-sensory-activities-for-every-age.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical guide helps child care providers design low‑prep, inclusive summer sensory activities for infants through preschoolers and mixed‑age groups, offering age‑appropriate station recipes, rotation systems, quick‑clean storage, and simple planning templates so teams can run engaging, child‑centered play with minimal setup. It emphasizes safety and compliance—named "water watchers," shallow water, CPR/first‑aid, heat precautions, documentation and licensing checks—plus strategies to adapt for sensory differences, observe and document learning, and use routines and resources to keep activities safe, efficient, and measurable.
]]></description>
<category>#summer</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#summer?</category>
<category>#water</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:10:39 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Actividades Sensoriales de Verano: Diversión Segura para Todas las Edades</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-organizar-actividades-sensoriales-de-verano-divertidas-y-seguras-para-todas-las-edades.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Guía práctica para proveedores y directores de cuidado infantil que propone actividades sensoriales veraniegas inclusivas y de bajo esfuerzo —con estaciones rotativas, recetas rápidas y materiales reutilizables— pensadas por edades para promover dominios del desarrollo (motricidad, lenguaje, resolución social y autorregulación) mientras priorizan la diversión, la seguridad y la supervisión.  
Incluye pautas de seguridad (supervisión dedicada, agua poco profunda, RCP/primeros auxilios, sombra y pausas para hidratación), estrategias de adaptación para diferencias sensoriales, plantillas rápidas para montar estaciones, métodos breves de observación y referencias prácticas (ChildCareEd, CDC) para cumplimiento y evaluación sencilla.
]]></description>
<category>#summer,</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#summer?</category>
<category>#water</category>
<category>#summer</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:10:39 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can Child Care Programs Beat the Heat and Keep Children Safe on Hot Days?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-beat-the-heat-and-keep-children-safe-on-hot-days.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Use simple, evidence-informed routines—check the heat index before every outdoor block, prep shade and hydration stations, shorten and shift outdoor play to cooler times, train staff on early signs and a practiced response plan, and take special precautions for infants and toddlers—to prevent heat illness in child care settings. Post a weather-decision chart, assign clear roles (water watcher, heat-kit grabber), keep cooling supplies handy, and communicate policies with families to ensure consistent, quick action and reduced emergency risk.
]]></description>
<category>#heat</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#hydration</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#outdoorplay</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:10:00 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Calor y Cuidado Infantil: Estrategias para Mantener a los Niños Seguros</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-vencer-el-calor-y-mantener-a-los-ni-os-seguros-en-los-d-as-calurosos.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo ofrece rutinas claras y prácticas para prevenir enfermedades por calor en la atención infantil — revisar el clima antes de cada salida, preparar sombra, establecer horarios de hidratación, acortar los bloques exteriores y adaptar medidas para bebés y niños pequeños — con roles asignados y kits de enfriamiento.  
También describe cómo reconocer y responder rápidamente a señales tempranas y emergencias por calor (pasos numerados, cuándo llamar al 911) y recomienda formación, comunicación con las familias y políticas publicadas (cuadros de decisión) para garantizar coherencia y reducir riesgos.
]]></description>
<category>#heat</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#hydration</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#outdoorplay</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:10:00 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs keep children safe and calm around fireworks?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-keep-children-safe-and-calm-around-fireworks.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Child care programs can keep children safe and calm around fireworks by adopting a strict "no on‑site fireworks" policy, attending professional displays, creating a short, staffed event plan with active supervision, conducting facility and emergency checks (alarms, extinguishers, first aid/CPR), and practicing evacuation and incident drills while following state licensing rules.  
Support sensory and emotional needs with quiet rooms, child‑sized hearing protection, alternative activities and previews, clear family communication and permissions, and avoid common mistakes by limiting stations, using templates/checklists, and assigning zone leads and staff buddies.
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#hearing,</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#fireworks.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:04:28 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Seguridad y Calma Durante los Fuegos Artificiales en el Cuidado Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-mantener-a-los-ni-os-seguros-y-tranquilos-cerca-de-los-fuegos-artificiales.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía ofrece pasos breves, prácticos e inclusivos para que directores y proveedores de cuidado infantil planifiquen celebraciones seguras, protejan a los niños de riesgos físicos y sensoriales asociados a los fuegos artificiales y cumplan con los requisitos de licencia.  
Incluye una política de "no fuegos artificiales en el sitio", estaciones y materiales alternativos, apoyos sensoriales (orejeras, sala tranquila), comprobaciones y protocolos de emergencia, comunicación clara con las familias y prácticas para evitar errores comunes.
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#hearing</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#fireworks</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:04:28 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can Screen-Free Board and Movement Games Help Young Children Learn and Stay Calm?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-screen-free-board-and-movement-games-help-young-children-learn-and-stay-calm.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Screen-free gaming pairs short, low-tech tabletop/cooperative games with brief gross‑motor activities to boost preschoolers’ language, social skills, attention, planning, self‑regulation, and physical development while reducing passive screen time.  
The guide provides evidence-based game types and movement ideas, inclusion adaptations, scheduling and safety tips, staff training and family-communication strategies, and simple assessment methods so programs can implement short (1–20 minute) game sessions and micro-movement breaks as routine practice.
]]></description>
<category>#boardgames</category>
<category>#preschoolers.</category>
<category>#movement</category>
<category>#movement—gives</category>
<category>#play.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:04:05 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Más Juego, Menos Pantalla: Actividades para Aprender y Calmarse</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/pueden-los-juegos-sin-pantalla-de-mesa-y-de-movimiento-ayudar-a-los-ni-os-peque-os-a-aprender-y-tranquilizarse.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El "juego sin pantalla" combina juegos de mesa cooperativos y breves actividades de movimiento para desarrollar atención, lenguaje, planificación, autorregulación y habilidades sociales, además de mejorar la condición física y reducir el tiempo pasivo frente a pantallas.  
La guía ofrece tipos de juegos, adaptaciones inclusivas y consejos prácticos para implementarlo en el centro (sesiones cortas de 10–20 minutos, rotar 3–5 juegos, apoyos visuales, estaciones, formación del personal, política familiar) y remite a recursos como ChildCareEd y el CDC.
]]></description>
<category>#juegosdemesa</category>
<category>#movimiento</category>
<category>#preescolares.</category>
<category>#juego</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:04:05 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>What are age-appropriate Fourth of July activities for daycares?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-are-age-appropriate-fourth-of-july-activities-for-daycares.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide helps daycare directors plan a calm, age-appropriate Fourth of July using short, supervised bursts of activity (2–3 rotating stations such as low‑mess crafts, sensory bins, and movement), brief circle time, and sensory alternatives so young children stay included and regulated.  
It emphasizes health and safety—collecting permissions, strict food and medication/allergy procedures, banning on‑site fireworks, providing hearing protection and a quiet retreat, assigning staff roles, and checking state licensing rules—while encouraging clear family communication and simple take‑home materials.
]]></description>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#crafts</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:44 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Celebrando el 4 de Julio con Niños Pequeños de Forma Segura y Divertida</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/qu-actividades-del-4-de-julio-son-apropiadas-por-edad-para-guarder-as.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía ofrece a directores y proveedores recomendaciones para celebrar el 4 de julio con preescolares de manera segura e inclusiva mediante actividades cortas (2–3 estaciones de 8–20 minutos), apoyos sensoriales, alternativas a fuegos artificiales y supervisión del personal. Incluye prácticas concretas sobre permisos, gestión de alergias y alimentos, comunicación familiar, roles del personal y recursos listos como las guías Stars & Stripes y la colección de ChildCareEd.
]]></description>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#sensory,</category>
<category>#crafts</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:44 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can we teach community and country to young children in simple, respectful ways?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-teach-community-and-country-to-young-children-in-simple-respectful-ways.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Teaching community and country to young children works best through short, developmentally appropriate, hands‑on activities—like dramatic play, simple maps, songs, and brief guest visits—that emphasize helpers, places, symbols and leadership traits while following state licensing and privacy rules. Involve families in low‑pressure ways (photos, stories, optional sharing), focus on values such as empathy, fairness and belonging, and use ready resources and brief reflection to adapt activities for different ages and needs.
]]></description>
<category>#community</category>
<category>#country</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#citizenship</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:28 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mi Comunidad, Mi País: Actividades para Niños Pequeños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-podemos-ense-ar-la-comunidad-y-el-pa-s-a-ni-os-peque-os-de-manera-simple-y-respetuosa.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía propone actividades prácticas y de baja preparación para enseñar a niños pequeños sobre la comunidad y el país —centradas en ayudantes, lugares, símbolos y rutinas— usando lenguaje breve, juego de roles, canciones y visitas cortas. Recomienda involucrar a las familias de forma opcional, adaptar tiempos y estaciones según la edad, respetar la diversidad y las normativas estatales, y ofrece recursos listos en ChildCareEd para implementar y evaluar las actividades.
]]></description>
<category>#comunidad</category>
<category>#pais</category>
<category>#niños</category>
<category>#familias</category>
<category>#ciudadanía</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:28 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Get Moving: How Can Child Care Programs Build Physical Activity Into the Daily Routine?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/get-moving-how-can-child-care-programs-build-physical-activity-into-the-daily-routine.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article recommends that child care programs build daily physical activity into routines using short, frequent micro-sessions and a mix of structured skill-building and unstructured play, adapted by age (infants/toddlers, preschoolers, school-age) and by space and schedule constraints. It emphasizes safety, inclusion, staff training, family partnership, environment tweaks, and monitoring with checklists/resources to make movement sustainable and developmentally appropriate, and offers practical tips and ready-to-use ideas for immediate implementation.
]]></description>
<category>#physicalactivity</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#play,</category>
<category>#movement,</category>
<category>#grossmotor</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#movement</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:24 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Moverse Todos los Días: Cómo Integrar Actividad Física en la Rutina Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-podemos-incorporar-la-actividad-f-sica-a-la-rutina-diaria-en-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo ofrece pasos prácticos y basados en evidencia para integrar actividad física diaria en el cuidado infantil mediante juego dirigido y libre, micro‑sesiones, estaciones rotativas y adaptaciones por edad (0–2, 3–5, 6+), destacando beneficios para habilidades motoras, atención, regulación socioemocional y aprendizaje.  
Incluye pautas de seguridad e inclusión, estrategias para espacios pequeños, errores comunes a evitar y acciones para sostener el cambio (capacitación del personal, alianzas con familias, monitoreo y listas de verificación), recomendando empezar con micro‑sesiones y documentar el progreso.
]]></description>
<category>#actividad</category>
<category>#niños</category>
<category>#juego,</category>
<category>#movimiento</category>
<category>#motricidad</category>
<category>#juego</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:24 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Pequeñas Manos, Grandes Ideas: Garabatos y Dibujo en la Primera Infancia</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/pueden-los-garabatos-y-el-dibujo-desarrollar-la-motricidad-fina-y-la-creatividad.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo explica que el garabateo y el dibujo en la primera infancia son prácticas de bajo costo que fortalecen la motricidad fina, la coordinación manual, la creatividad y la regulación de la atención, apoyadas por evidencia y por las etapas del desarrollo del dibujo. Ofrece actividades concretas (estaciones de crayones, scratch art, bandejas de motricidad), pautas para organizar centros y rutinas, consejos de seguridad y documentación, y adaptaciones para niños diversos para convertir el dibujo cotidiano en oportunidades de aprendizaje medibles.
]]></description>
<category>#garabatos</category>
<category>#dibujo</category>
<category>#preescolares</category>
<category>#motricidadfina</category>
<category>#creatividad.</category>
<category>#creatividad</category>
<category>#preescolares.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:22 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Pequeños Atletas, Grandes Compañeros: Mini Olimpiadas para Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-podemos-organizar-unas-mini-olimpiadas-en-la-guarder-a-que-fomenten-movimiento-y-trabajo-en-equipo.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Las Mini Olimpiadas para guarderías convierten un día en una experiencia lúdica y formativa mediante ráfagas cortas de movimiento, retos cooperativos y rituales que fortalecen habilidades motoras gruesas, sociales y la cultura del aula; la guía ofrece planificación paso a paso, eventos de bajo prep, materiales por estación y comunicación con familias.  
Incluye instrucciones sobre tiempos (ceremonia, 3–6 estaciones de 6–8 min, clausura), roles del personal, adaptaciones inclusivas y de seguridad, y consejos para evitar errores comunes y maximizar beneficios físicos, socioemocionales y cognitivos.
]]></description>
<category>#movement,</category>
<category>#balance</category>
<category>#play,</category>
<category>#teamwork,</category>
<category>#grossmotor,</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#teamwork</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:19 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Música, Historia y Orgullo: Cómo Celebrar la Cultura Negra con Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedes-celebrar-de-forma-efectiva-la-cultura-y-la-m-sica-negras-en-tu-programa.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Celebrar la cultura y la música negras en educación infantil de forma intencional y continua fortalece la identidad, el compromiso y el aprendizaje de los niños, y requiere integrar fuentes auténticas y múltiples modalidades (música, arte, comida, narración) junto con la colaboración de familias y artistas comunitarios. El texto ofrece pautas prácticas para diseñar un currículo musical culturalmente relevante, evitar tokenismo y sesgos mediante formación y políticas, y propone primeros pasos accionables como fijar metas anuales, añadir un bloque musical semanal y revisar materiales y prácticas disciplinarias.
]]></description>
<category>#BlackCulture</category>
<category>#Music</category>
<category>#Children;</category>
<category>#Inclusion</category>
<category>#Educators</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:18 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Superhéroes de las Emociones: Actividades para Niños Pequeños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/puede-una-semana-de-superh-roes-ense-ar-a-los-ni-os-a-nombrar-y-manejar-las-emociones.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo propone una semana temática de superhéroes como herramienta lúdica y basada en evidencia para enseñar a preescolares vocabulario emocional, autorregulación y toma de perspectiva mediante estaciones prácticas (rescate dramático, circuito, manualidades, clasificación y lectura) y microprácticas repetidas. Además ofrece pautas para adaptaciones inclusivas, seguridad y cumplimiento, participación familiar, medición de avances y errores comunes con sus soluciones, para convertir la imaginación en aprendizaje SEL concreto.
]]></description>
<category>#juego</category>
<category>#rutinas</category>
<category>#superheroe</category>
<category>#preescolares</category>
<category>#SEL,</category>
<category>#seguridad</category>
<category>#preescolares.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:03:10 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Explorando Japón en el Aula: Cultura, Arte y Aprendizaje para Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-explorar-de-forma-significativa-la-cultura-japonesa-con-ni-os-peque-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Guía práctica para incorporar la cultura japonesa en aulas de primera infancia mediante saludos diarios, canciones, centros de arte y sensoriales, actividades como origami y festivales adaptados (hanami, Hina Matsuri, Setsubun, Kodomo no Hi), con materiales seguros y listas de recursos fiables. Enfatiza el respeto cultural —centrar voces reales, evitar estereotipos y tokenismo—, la participación familiar, la seguridad y la evaluación mediante observaciones, proponiendo unidades breves (1–3 semanas) que favorezcan el desarrollo del lenguaje, la motricidad y la inclusión.
]]></description>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#activities</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 19:02:40 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Día de Disfraces y Personajes: Cómo Impulsar la Imaginación y el Aprendizaje</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-organizar-un-d-a-de-disfraces-y-personajes-que-realmente-impulse-la-imaginaci-n-y-el-aprendizaje.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Un Día de Disfraces y Personajes, diseñado con intención, se convierte en un juego dramático de alto impacto que potencia el lenguaje, la narración, las habilidades socioemocionales, la función ejecutiva, la motricidad y la resolución creativa de problemas, siempre que se planifique con objetivos claros y se documente el aprendizaje.  
La guía ofrece pasos prácticos para garantizar seguridad, inclusión y cumplimiento (permisos, supervisión, apoyos sensoriales), materiales abiertos y rotativos, andamiaje docente y participación familiar, además de métodos de observación y reflexión para iterar y mejorar futuros eventos.
]]></description>
<category>#dramaticplay</category>
<category>#imagination</category>
<category>#pretendplay</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#inclusion.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:57:58 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómics en Preescolar: Cómo Mejorar la Narración y el Dibujo</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-ni-os-de-preescolar-crear-sus-propios-c-mics-para-mejorar-la-narraci-n-y-el-dibujo.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Crear cómics en preescolar es una actividad de bajo costo y fácil preparación que potencia la narración, el desarrollo del lenguaje, la alfabetización emergente, la motricidad fina y las funciones ejecutivas mediante secuencias cortas de viñetas, preguntas repetitivas y apoyos visuales.  
La guía ofrece materiales y plantillas (3–6 viñetas), actividades paso a paso (calentamiento, viñeta única, tira de 3 viñetas), estrategias inclusivas y evaluación ligera con fotos y listas de verificación, además de consejos prácticos para mantener la actividad manejable y centrada en el proceso en lugar del acabado artístico.
]]></description>
<category>#comic</category>
<category>#storytelling</category>
<category>#literacy?</category>
<category>#drawing?</category>
<category>#storytelling.</category>
<category>#storytelling,</category>
<category>#literacy</category>
<category>#drawing</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:57:42 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo los Juegos Deportivos Fomentan el Espíritu de Equipo en Niños Pequeños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/pueden-los-juegos-deportivos-ense-ar-cooperaci-n-y-esp-ritu-de-equipo-en-los-ni-os-peque-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo explica cómo actividades deportivas cortas y bien diseñadas pueden enseñar cooperación, autorregulación, habilidades motoras y sentido de pertenencia en niños pequeños, ofreciendo pasos concretos para su implementación en el aula.  
Incluye una guía práctica (objetivos claros, caja de materiales, sesiones de 5–15 minutos, reglas cooperativas, adaptaciones para inclusión, roles del personal y medición mediante listas de verificación) y aconseja empezar con poco, ser consistente y consultar recursos y requisitos estatales.
]]></description>
<category>#trabajoenequipo,</category>
<category>#deportes,</category>
<category>#cooperación,</category>
<category>#maestros</category>
<category>#inclusión.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:56:02 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Copa Mundial en el Aula: Cómo Enseñar a los Niños Sobre Diferentes Países</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-ense-ar-a-los-ni-os-sobre-diferentes-pa-ses-durante-la-copa-mundial.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
La Copa Mundial puede aprovecharse como una oportunidad motivadora y respetuosa para enseñar a niños pequeños sobre países, geografía, lenguaje y empatía mediante actividades breves y repetidas (pasaportes, mapas a nivel infantil, canciones y centros rotativos), con participación familiar opcional y apropiada al desarrollo.  
Evita estereotipos o disfraces culturales, ofrece etiquetas bilingües y opciones tranquilas, sigue normas de alergias y licencias estatales, y evalúa el éxito con chequeos rápidos: participación sin presión, gestos más amables y aportes familiares.
]]></description>
<category>#seen,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:55:34 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Voces Unidas: Cómo el Canto Fortalece la Comunidad en el Aula</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-construye-la-comunidad-cantar-juntos-en-el-aula.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Cantar juntos en el aula es una práctica de bajo esfuerzo y alto impacto que, respaldada por evidencia, fomenta pertenencia, regulación fisiológica, atención compartida, desarrollo del lenguaje y habilidades socioemocionales cuando se usa con intención.  
El artículo ofrece rutinas concretas y pasos prácticos —canciones breves y repetidas (bienvenida, orden, despedida), roles rotativos, opciones inclusivas para participar, ajustes sensoriales, formación del personal y señales musicales temporizadas— para implementar de inmediato y mejorar transiciones y la cultura del aula.
]]></description>
<category>#circletime?</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:55:14 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo Integrar la Copa del Mundo en tu Programa de Cuidado Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-integrar-la-copa-del-mundo-en-mi-guarder-a-de-forma-inclusiva-segura-y-adecuada-al-desarrollo.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
La Copa del Mundo es una ventana breve y potente para conectar la curiosidad de los niños con la geografía, el movimiento, el lenguaje y el aprendizaje socioemocional mediante rutinas cortas y actividades (alfombra, centros, sensorial) que evitan estereotipos y fomentan la inclusión.  
La guía recomienda participación familiar opcional y respetuosa (saludos, fotos), estrategias concretas para enseñar cooperación y regulación emocional, y que directores revisen logística, llegada, personal y planes de emergencia usando recursos y plantillas de ChildCareEd y cumpliendo requisitos estatales.
]]></description>
<category>#visto,</category>
<category>#WorldCup</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#inclusion</category>
<category>#safety</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:55:04 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Patear, Correr y Aprender: Fútbol para el Desarrollo Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/pueden-los-juegos-sencillos-de-f-tbol-desarrollar-las-habilidades-motoras-gruesas-en-ni-os-peque-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Los juegos sencillos de fútbol para preescolares son una herramienta de bajo coste y alta eficacia para desarrollar motricidad, coordinación, autorregulación y habilidades sociales mediante actividades cortas, repetitivas y adaptables que requieren poco equipo. El texto ofrece juegos prácticos, estrategias de inclusión y seguridad, pautas de duración y supervisión, y consejos para evaluar el progreso e involucrar a las familias en la continuidad y la adaptación de las actividades.
]]></description>
<category>#futbol</category>
<category>#motricidad,</category>
<category>#habilidades</category>
<category>#preescolares</category>
<category>#motricidad</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:54:50 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Música, Movimiento e Inclusión: Cómo Crear un Día de Aprendizaje Activo</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/puede-un-d-a-de-movimiento-con-tema-de-video-musical-mejorar-el-aprendizaje-y-la-inclusi-n-en-mi-programa.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El texto explica cómo diseñar e implementar un Día de Movimiento con tema de video musical para educación infantil, usando bloques cortos y estaciones repetibles (video‑baile, ritmo/instrumentos, coreografía y rincón de calma) para practicar habilidades motoras, lenguaje, autorregulación y juego social.  
Incluye una lista práctica de preparación y horario, adaptaciones para inclusión, formación y acompañamiento del personal, estrategias para evitar errores comunes, métodos sencillos de medición del impacto y recursos recomendados (ChildCareEd, Sing Play Create, CDC) para empezar de inmediato.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:54:39 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Música que Calma: Cómo Crear una Rutina Diaria para Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedo-crear-una-rutina-diaria-de-m-sica-que-calme-y-enfoque-a-los-ni-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Una rutina musical diaria corta y predecible —con tres canciones constantes para bienvenida, movimiento y calma— ayuda a mejorar la autorregulación, la atención y el lenguaje en niños, facilita transiciones y reduce el estrés, siempre adaptándola a necesidades sensoriales e inclusión.  
El artículo ofrece pasos prácticos para implementarla (elegir canciones, enseñar y practicar 3–5 días, usar señales visuales y roles, mantener segmentos breves), maneras de medir impacto rápidamente y recursos de formación y apoyo profesional para ajustar la rutina.
]]></description>
<category>#music</category>
<category>#routine</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#calm</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:54:15 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can Superhero Day Capes and Pretend Play Teach Children to Help Others?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-superhero-day-capes-and-pretend-play-teach-children-to-help-others.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Superhero Day uses capes, scripts, and pretend-play centers to teach preschoolers prosocial skills—helping, empathy, safety, language, and motor development—by rehearsing helper roles through short role-plays, guided reflection, and mission-based activities. This guide offers concrete center ideas, safety and inclusion checklists, assessment and family-engagement strategies, and practical staff-coaching and licensing tips so teachers can scaffold learning and transfer skills home.
]]></description>
<category>#superhero</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#helpers</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#empathy.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:20:01 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Is the Lost Art of Storytelling the Key to Building Language in Young Children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/is-the-lost-art-of-storytelling-the-key-to-building-language-in-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Oral storytelling, once central to early childhood settings, remains a powerful, research-backed way to build vocabulary, narrative skills, social-emotional understanding, and cultural inclusion when restored as short, intentional daily routines. Practical strategies include the three-talk routine (before/during/after), repeated readings with props (story baskets, stones, puppets), multilingual family involvement, simple progress checks, and brief staff training to make storytelling measurable, equitable, and classroom-ready.
]]></description>
<category>#storytelling,</category>
<category>#language,</category>
<category>#literacy,</category>
<category>#children,</category>
<category>#storytime</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#literacy‑rich.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:19:56 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can ocean-themed sensory bins and water play boost learning while staying safe in preschool programs?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-ocean-themed-sensory-bins-and-water-play-boost-learning-while-staying-safe-in-preschool-programs.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Ocean-themed sensory bins and water play are low-cost, developmentally meaningful tools that promote fine motor skills, language, early math/science, self-regulation, and social skills when focused on a single learning goal and supported by adult-led prompts. The article gives practical, evidence-informed steps for selecting age-appropriate, taste-safe materials and durable props; linking activities to measurable goals; documenting outcomes; involving families; and maintaining licensing-friendly safety through active supervision, arm’s-reach rules, quick-empty policies, and staff first-aid/CPR training.
]]></description>
<category>#sensory</category>
<category>#ocean</category>
<category>#waterplay</category>
<category>#preschool</category>
<category>#safety.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:19:39 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can we tame the ‘monsters’ of big emotions in young children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-we-tame-the-monsters-of-big-emotions-in-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical, evidence-informed guide helps child care providers notice, name, and reduce young children''s intense emotions—framed as "monsters"—by using short, repeatable practices (Connect → Calm → Coach), simple calming tools (e.g., balloon breath, squeeze toys), and playful routines so regulation becomes automatic. It also recommends setting up calm corners, partnering with families, tracking incidents, using culturally and trauma-informed approaches, and referring to specialists when safety concerns or persistent problems remain.
]]></description>
<category>#children’s</category>
<category>#emotions</category>
<category>#calm</category>
<category>#SEL</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:19:36 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<title>What Do Superheroes Teach Kids About Kindness and Courage?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-do-superheroes-teach-kids-about-kindness-and-courage.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how intentional superhero-themed play can teach young children kindness, courage, consent, and empathy through short scripted routines, role-play, story reflection, and concrete classroom jobs—drawing on resources like ChildCareEd, CSEFEL, and WGU. It provides practical activities, consent and safety scripts, differentiation and inclusion strategies, staff-training and measurement tips, and troubleshooting advice so providers can implement brief, repeatable micro-routines that build social-emotional skills and reduce conflict.
]]></description>
<category>#classroom,</category>
<category>#superheroes,</category>
<category>#kindness,</category>
<category>#courage,</category>
<category>#empathy</category>
<category>#kindness</category>
<category>#courage.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:19:34 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<title>How can superhero-themed play help build confidence in young children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-superhero-themed-play-help-build-confidence-in-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Superhero-themed play is a developmentally appropriate, research-backed approach that helps preschoolers practice courage, self-regulation, perspective-taking, language, and motor skills through symbolic role-play, scaffolded missions, social feedback, and reflective prompts. The article provides classroom-ready activities (obstacle missions, dramatic-play HQ, art and literacy stations), plus safety, inclusion, staffing and licensing guidance, routines for implementation and assessment, and family-communication tips to turn playful moments into measurable confidence-building opportunities.
]]></description>
<category>#confidence</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#confidence,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:19:29 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<title>Lo que Toy Story 5 Nos Enseña sobre la Imaginación de los Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/qu-nos-ense-a-toy-story-5-sobre-el-poder-del-juego-imaginativo.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Toy Story 5 subraya que el juego imaginativo —más que el consumo pasivo de pantallas— es esencial para el desarrollo cognitivo, lingüístico, social y emocional de los niños.  
El artículo ofrece acciones concretas para centros: usar la película como provocación seguida de actividades prácticas, priorizar materiales abiertos y bloques largos de juego, brindar andamiaje mínimo, involucrar a las familias, documentar procesos y emplear la tecnología solo como puente y no como sustituto.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:19:18 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>What Does Toy Story 5 Teach Us About the Power of Imaginative Play?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-does-toy-story-5-teach-us-about-the-power-of-imaginative-play.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Pixar’s Toy Story 5 highlights the importance of imaginative, social, hands-on play over passive screen consumption, showing that pretend play supports language, executive function, social cognition, symbolic thought, and empathy. The article translates these themes into practical classroom actions—use brief film provocations paired with dramatic-play centers, open-ended materials, uninterrupted play blocks, family prompts, balanced tech use, and simple documentation—to help providers scaffold, assess, and advocate for play-based learning.
]]></description>
<category>#imagination-driven,</category>
<category>#playful</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#learning.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:19:18 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<item>
<title>Narración y Cultura: Cómo Enseñar a los Niños Sobre el Mundo</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-podemos-ense-ar-a-los-ni-os-sobre-la-cultura-y-el-mundo-a-trav-s-de-la-narraci-n.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
La narración es una herramienta económica y basada en evidencia para fortalecer la identidad, el vocabulario y la empatía de los niños, conectando el aula con la cultura del hogar mediante rutinas repetidas, cestas de cuento, estaciones diarias y libros multiculturales.  
El artículo ofrece pasos prácticos para planificar actividades (foco semanal, rutina de tres fases, materiales sencillos), estrategias de inclusión familiar opcionales y seguras, métodos de evaluación y recomendaciones para evitar errores como estereotipos o pedir a un niño que represente toda una cultura.
]]></description>
<category>#narración</category>
<category>#alfabetización</category>
<category>#niños.</category>
<category>#alfabetización?</category>
<category>#cultura</category>
<category>#familias</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 18:18:57 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<item>
<title>Apegos Seguros con Bebés: Cómo Crear Confianza desde el Cuidado Diario</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-construir-apegos-seguros-con-los-beb-s.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo ofrece a directores y proveedores una hoja de ruta práctica, basada en la evidencia, para fomentar el apego seguro en infantes mediante atención diaria responsiva, diseño del programa, detección temprana y colaboración familiar, con estrategias relacionales realistas para entornos grupales.  
Recomienda acciones concretas —notar, responder, repetir—, caregiving primario, ratios bajos y formación continua; usar rutinas previsibles, documentar observaciones, emplear herramientas de evaluación y derivar a apoyos IECMH cuando haya preocupaciones, además de involucrar y respetar la cultura de las familias.
]]></description>
<category>#apego</category>
<category>#infantes</category>
<category>#cuidadores</category>
<category>#responsivo</category>
<category>#seguridad</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:29:49 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<item>
<title>Pequeñas Mentes, Grandes Habilidades: Cómo Desarrollar la Función Ejecutiva</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-apoyar-eficazmente-las-habilidades-de-funci-n-ejecutiva-en-ni-os-peque-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
La función ejecutiva —atención, memoria de trabajo, control inhibitorio y flexibilidad— es crucial en la primera infancia porque sostiene la capacidad de seguir instrucciones, participar en grupo y regular emociones, predice mejor preparación escolar y es maleable mediante intervenciones tempranas.  
El artículo ofrece recomendaciones prácticas: ejercicios lúdicos breves y frecuentes (1–5 minutos), integración en rutinas y movimiento, apoyos visuales, un enfoque por niveles para adaptaciones, formación del personal, involucrar a las familias y medición simple (línea de base y observaciones semanales) para monitorizar y celebrar el progreso.
]]></description>
<category>#executive</category>
<category>#function</category>
<category>#preschoolers?</category>
<category>#selfregulation</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:27:49 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<item>
<title>Cómo Enseñar en Grupos de Edades Mixtas sin Dejar a Nadie Atrás</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-aplicar-pr-cticas-de-ense-anza-apropiadas-para-el-desarrollo-en-grupos-de-edades-mixtas.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El texto explica cómo aplicar la Práctica Apropiada para el Desarrollo (DAP) en aulas de edades mixtas para favorecer beneficios sociales, emocionales y cognitivos, proponiendo organización del espacio (zonas, estanterías bajas, materiales duplicados), diseño de actividades con entradas escalonadas (apoyado, guiado, extensión) y estrategias de inclusión cultural y de asociación con las familias. Además ofrece métodos prácticos de evaluación basada en evidencias, prevención y apoyo conductual por niveles, soluciones a errores comunes y tres pasos inmediatos para comenzar (proteger tiempo de centros, añadir instrucciones escalonadas y registrar una foto y nota semanal), recordando verificar los requisitos estatales.
]]></description>
<category>#mixedage.</category>
<category>#DAP</category>
<category>#play,</category>
<category>#assessment)</category>
<category>#inclusion</category>
<category>#DAP,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:27:46 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<title>Cuidado Receptivo en Bebés: Alimentación, Pañales y Descanso con Atención</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-mejora-la-atenci-n-receptiva-durante-la-alimentaci-n-el-cambio-de-pa-ales-y-el-descanso-la-atenci-n-infantil-en-entornos-grupales.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
La atención receptiva en alimentación, cambio de pañales y descanso convierte tareas rutinarias en interacciones intencionales: consiste en notar las señales del bebé, responder con rapidez y calidez y documentar lo que funciona para promover desarrollo neurológico, apego y seguridad.  
Para implementarla se recomiendan políticas escritas, un léxico corto de señales, formación breve y micro‑coaching, entregas verbales de 2 minutos en cada cambio de turno, prácticas de higiene y sueño seguro, y auditorías/registros regulares (usando guías como ChildCareEd y cumpliendo requisitos estatales).
]]></description>
<category>#vínculo</category>
<category>#lenguaje,</category>
<category>#desarrollo.</category>
<category>#responsiva</category>
<category>#bebés</category>
<category>#alimentación</category>
<category>#pañales</category>
<category>#sueño)</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:27:43 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Niños Seguros e Independientes: Estrategias para Programas Infantiles</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-ayudar-a-los-ni-os-a-desarrollar-confianza-e-independencia.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo ofrece pasos prácticos, basados en investigación, para que proveedores de cuidado infantil fomenten la confianza y la independencia en niños mediante diseño del aula, rutinas visuales y cortas, lenguaje docente específico y andamiaje gradual. Propone actividades concretas (tareas de vida práctica, juegos de función ejecutiva, roles de aula), recomendaciones de implementación (empezar con 1–2 rutinas, repetir, limitar opciones), y consejos para evitar errores comunes y formar al personal, señalando además revisar requisitos estatales.
]]></description>
<category>#confidence</category>
<category>#independence</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#teachers</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:27:32 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<item>
<title>Cómo Crear un Aula de Bebés Calmada, Segura y Llena de Cuidado</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-podemos-crear-un-aula-de-beb-s-calmada-y-nutritiva.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Crear un aula de bebés calmada, segura y nutritiva combina diseño intencional del espacio (iluminación suave, rincón de calma, materiales limitados y medidas de seguridad), rutinas predecibles y respuestas receptivas que favorecen la autorregulación y el apego.  
Los líderes sostienen estas prácticas mediante formación breve, coaching, sistemas simples de registro y comunicación con las familias; empiece con un cambio pequeño esta semana y recuerde verificar los requisitos estatales.
]]></description>
<category>#infant</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#attachment.</category>
<category>#attachment</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:27:27 GMT</pubDate>
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