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<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>
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<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>
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</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>
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</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>
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<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>
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<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>
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<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>
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</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>
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</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>
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</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>
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</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>
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</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>
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</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>
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</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>
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</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>
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</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>
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<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>
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</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>
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<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>
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<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>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>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>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>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>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>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>
</item>
<item>
<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>
</item>
<item>
<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>
</item>
<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>
</item>
<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>
</item>
<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>
</item>
<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>
</item>
<item>
<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>
</item>
<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>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Memoria y Atención en Niños: Actividades Simples para el Cuidado Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-ayudar-a-desarrollar-la-memoria-y-la-atenci-n-en-los-ni-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo ofrece estrategias prácticas y basadas en evidencia para que proveedores y directores de cuidado infantil fortalezcan la memoria, la atención y las funciones ejecutivas de los niños mediante rutinas cortas y consistentes, señales concretas, descomposición de tareas, lenguaje metacognitivo, movimiento integrado y juegos breves.  
Propone además cambios ambientales y formación docente, un plan escalonado de apoyos (universales, dirigidos y derivación), y recomendaciones para medir y documentar el progreso, enfatizando la práctica repetida, adaptaciones para niños con dificultades y la colaboración con familias y especialistas.
]]></description>
<category>#memoria,</category>
<category>#atencion,</category>
<category>#ejecutiva,</category>
<category>#movimiento</category>
<category>#juego</category>
<category>#ejecutiva.</category>
<category>#memoria</category>
<category>#atencion</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:26:33 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo el Desarrollo Temprano Influye en el Comportamiento de los Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-influye-el-desarrollo-temprano-en-el-comportamiento-de-los-ni-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El texto explica que el comportamiento infantil refleja el desarrollo en dominios (cognitivo, lenguaje, motor y socioemocional) y que observar hitos y patrones convierte las conductas en información útil para enseñar habilidades en lugar de castigar, reduciendo crisis y mejorando resultados.  
Propone prácticas concretas: observación ABC y registros fechados, comunicación con familias centrada en fortalezas, estrategias escalonadas en el aula (universales, específicas e individualizadas) y cribado o derivación a intervención temprana cuando hay señales de alarma o patrones persistentes.
]]></description>
<category>#developmental</category>
<category>#development,</category>
<category>#behavior</category>
<category>#earlyintervention</category>
<category>#socialemotional.</category>
<category>#development</category>
<category>#milestones</category>
<category>#socialemotional</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:25:59 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Relaciones que Construyen Cerebros: Desarrollo Cerebral en la Primera Infancia</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-moldean-las-relaciones-el-desarrollo-cerebral-temprano.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo expone que las relaciones sensibles y predecibles en la primera infancia —saludos individuales, serve-and-return, juego no interrumpido y rutinas— moldean la arquitectura cerebral, favorecen la regulación emocional y amortiguan los efectos del estrés tóxico documentados por la investigación sobre ACEs.  
Ofrece pasos prácticos para centros (asignaciones estables, formación del personal, diseño del ambiente, colaboración con familias, medición ligera y políticas que prioricen el trabajo relacional) y errores comunes con correcciones rápidas para convertir la ciencia del desarrollo en prácticas cotidianas que mejoren resultados a largo plazo.
]]></description>
<category>#cerebro</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:25:47 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Transiciones del Desarrollo: Cómo Apoyar a los Niños en Cada Etapa</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-apoyar-a-los-ni-os-durante-las-transiciones-del-desarrollo.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Las transiciones del desarrollo, presentes en la vida diaria del aula, son oportunidades para enseñar autorregulación y fortalecer relaciones cuando se diseñan con previsibilidad, señales visuales y auditivas, rutinas consistentes y pequeñas actividades puente. El artículo ofrece estrategias prácticas —avisos anticipados, temporizadores visuales, tableros Primero–Luego, planes individualizados co-creados con familias y especialistas— y recomienda medir progreso con indicadores sencillos y formar al personal para reducir conductas problemáticas y mantener mejoras.
]]></description>
<category>#familias</category>
<category>#4).</category>
<category>#desarrollo</category>
<category>#10).</category>
<category>#transiciones</category>
<category>#niños</category>
<category>#rutinas</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:15:55 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Jugar para Crecer: Cómo el Juego Apoya el Desarrollo Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-apoya-el-juego-el-crecimiento-f-sico-cognitivo-y-social-de-los-ni-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El juego es el motor central del desarrollo infantil, pues impulsa la salud física y las habilidades motoras, construye la cognición (lenguaje, funciones ejecutivas y pensamiento simbólico) y promueve la competencia socioemocional mediante la interacción social y el juego cooperativo.  
El artículo ofrece guías prácticas y basadas en evidencia para diseñar ambientes y rutinas, definir roles adultos, aplicar adaptaciones inclusivas y documentar el aprendizaje (observación, fotos, listas de verificación), además de recomendaciones concretas como tiempo al aire libre, andamiaje y colaboración con familias y especialistas.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:15:51 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Temperamento en Bebés y Niños Pequeños: Cómo Entender sus Diferentes Personalidades</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-entender-el-temperamento-en-beb-s-y-ni-os-peque-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El temperamento es un patrón biológicamente arraigado que determina cómo bebés y niños pequeños reaccionan a personas, sonidos y transiciones, y comprenderlo mediante observación permite crear un "goodness of fit" entre el niño y el entorno para reducir el estrés, favorecer el apego y la autorregulación.  
Las prácticas recomendadas incluyen adaptar rutinas y espacios (zonas activas/calmas, señales visuales, cuidados primarios), colaborar con las familias mediante notas y planes compartidos, aplicar estrategias específicas según rasgos temperamentales y derivar a especialistas cuando la conducta es intensa o persiste pese a apoyos consistentes.
]]></description>
<category>#temperamento</category>
<category>#bebés</category>
<category>#niños</category>
<category>#cuidadores</category>
<category>#comportamiento</category>
<category>#temperament,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:15:47 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Pequeños Problemas, Grandes Aprendizajes: Cómo Apoyar el Desarrollo Cognitivo</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-apoyar-el-desarrollo-cognitivo-mediante-actividades-de-resoluci-n-de-problemas.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El texto explica que los pequeños retos cotidianos —como construir con bloques, jugar roles o resolver cuántos platos hacen falta— impulsan el desarrollo cognitivo en la primera infancia al practicar procesos como fijar metas, generar y probar soluciones, monitorear resultados y revisar planes, lo que fortalece el razonamiento, la memoria de trabajo y la autorregulación.  
Ofrece pautas prácticas para educadores: crear episodios breves de resolución de problemas con materiales abiertos, aplicar un bucle de apoyo (observar → formular → modelar → ofrecer herramienta → volver), evaluar con portafolios y listas de control, involucrar a las familias y hacer pequeños cambios en el aula para aumentar oportunidades cognitivas.
]]></description>
<category>#educadores</category>
<category>#cognitivas</category>
<category>#resoluciónDeProblemas.</category>
<category>#juego</category>
<category>#preescolares:</category>
<category>#cognitiva,</category>
<category>#juego.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:15:27 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>El Cerebro del Niño en los Primeros Cinco Años: Lo que Debes Saber</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-se-desarrolla-el-cerebro-durante-los-primeros-cinco-a-os.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Los primeros cinco años son una ventana crítica en la que la neurogénesis, la sinaptogénesis, la mielinización y períodos sensibles hacen que la experiencia —especialmente las interacciones receptivas "serve-and-return"— moldee de forma duradera el aprendizaje, la regulación emocional y la conexión social.  
Para proveedores esto se traduce en prácticas concretas: ofrecer bloques largos de juego dirigido por el niño, responder de forma contingente y reparar la desregulación, garantizar nutrición, sueño y movimiento adecuados, vigilar hitos y coordinar derivaciones con las familias, evitando errores comunes como la fragmentación del juego, la sobre-dirección y el uso excesivo de pantallas.
]]></description>
<category>#desarrollo.</category>
<category>#juego,</category>
<category>#nutricion,</category>
<category>#cerebro</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:15:20 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Conversaciones Diarias que Enseñan: Cómo Apoyar el Lenguaje Temprano</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puede-la-conversaci-n-diaria-en-el-cuidado-infantil-fomentar-el-desarrollo-temprano-del-lenguaje.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
La conversación diaria —momentos cortos y cálidos durante rutinas— es la intervención más accesible y efectiva para desarrollar el lenguaje y la alfabetización temprana, ya que las vueltas conversacionales predicen el lenguaje, la cognición y el éxito escolar posteriores.  
El artículo ofrece pasos prácticos para el aula (narrar y ampliar, lecturas interactivas, canciones, etiquetas bilingües), estrategias para apoyar aprendices de dos lenguas y familias, y guías de monitoreo, derivación y formación del personal para integrar estas prácticas de forma intencional y sostenible.
]]></description>
<category>#language</category>
<category>#literacy.</category>
<category>#families,</category>
<category>#children</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:14:59 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo Entender el Desarrollo Típico y Atípico en los Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-comprender-el-desarrollo-t-pico-y-at-pico-en-la-infancia.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo explica cómo distinguir el desarrollo típico del atípico en niños y aporta pasos prácticos para observar, documentar y comunicar preocupaciones con un enfoque en las fortalezas, incluyendo listas de hitos y señales de alarma (p. ej., pérdida de habilidades, falta de respuesta social, afectación en varios dominios).  
Recomienda usar tamizajes validados (ASQ, guías del CDC), aplicar adaptaciones inclusivas en el aula, monitorizar por semanas y derivar a tamizaje o intervención temprana cuando persistan las preocupaciones, además de ofrecer ejemplos de lenguaje para familias y recursos formativos.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:14:57 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Moverse para Aprender: Cómo Desarrollar la Motricidad Gruesa en Niños</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedo-desarrollar-las-habilidades-motoras-gruesas-dentro-y-fuera-del-aula-para-los-ni-os-de-mi-programa.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía práctica explica cómo ofrecer breves oportunidades de movimiento, tanto en interiores como al aire libre, para desarrollar fuerza, equilibrio, coordinación y confianza en niños preescolares, con actividades de bajo material como circuitos, juegos con balón, carreras temáticas y tareas de jardín. Incluye consejos de seguridad, adaptaciones inclusivas, estrategias para integrar el movimiento en la jornada diaria y referencias a recursos prácticos (ChildCareEd, CDC) para planes imprimibles y seguimiento del desarrollo.
]]></description>
<category>#motricidad</category>
<category>#preescolar</category>
<category>#niños</category>
<category>#juego.</category>
<category>#equilibrio</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:14:56 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Motricidad Fina en Niños: Actividades Simples para Fortalecer Manos y Dedos</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-apoyar-el-desarrollo-de-la-motricidad-fina-con-actividades-simples.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo ofrece a proveedores de cuidado infantil actividades prácticas, económicas y basadas en evidencia para desarrollar la motricidad fina en niños —por ejemplo ensartar, cortar, usar pinzas, plastilina y pegatinas— y explica cómo integrarlas en centros rotativos con contenedores etiquetados y rotaciones breves (12–20 minutos) para promover práctica frecuente y lúdica. También aporta estrategias para adaptar la dificultad por niveles, evaluar y documentar el progreso con metas medibles, medidas de seguridad (p. ej. separar piezas pequeñas por edad), y recomendaciones para involucrar a las familias o derivar a servicios si las dificultades persisten.
]]></description>
<category>#finemotor</category>
<category>#preschool</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:14:38 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Abuso y Negligencia Infantil: Cómo Reconocer y Denunciar Señales de Alerta</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-deben-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-reconocer-y-denunciar-el-abuso-y-la-negligencia-infantil.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Guía práctica para directores y proveedores de cuidado infantil sobre cómo reconocer señales de abuso y negligencia (físicas, conductuales y de descuido), documentar objetivamente y notificar ante sospechas, enfatizando que la sospecha razonable suele obligar a denunciar y que los requisitos varían por estado.  
Incluye pasos inmediatos (asegurar la seguridad del niño y llamar a emergencias si es necesario), instrucciones para informes escritos y protección de registros, apoyos informados por trauma para niños y familias, y una lista de errores comunes y FAQs para responder con legalidad y sensibilidad.
]]></description>
<category>#abuse</category>
<category>#neglect.</category>
<category>#mandated</category>
<category>#documentation</category>
<category>#safety.</category>
<category>#neglect</category>
<category>#safety</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:06:32 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo Apoyar las Emociones y Amistades de los Niños en Edad Escolar</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-apoyar-mejor-el-desarrollo-social-y-emocional-de-los-ni-os-en-edad-escolar.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Los programas para niños en edad escolar pueden apoyar eficazmente las emociones y las amistades integrando prácticas breves y repetibles de aprendizaje social y emocional (autoconciencia, autogestión, conciencia social, habilidades de relación y toma de decisiones responsables) en rutinas diarias, diseñando entornos preventivos, respuestas adultas guiadas y apoyos escalonados informados por el trauma.  
Para implementarlo esta semana, use momentos concretos (llegada, tareas, rotaciones y círculo de cierre), lecciones de 5–10 minutos, cribado y derivación cuando haga falta, coaching breve para el personal, métricas simples (asistencia, habilidad SEL practicada y reflexión) y recursos prácticos de ChildCareEd, CDC y revisiones como RAND para sostener la práctica.
]]></description>
<category>#schoolage</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#socialemotional</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:06:04 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Curiosidad en Preescolar: Cómo Ayudar a los Niños a Explorar y Aprender</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-fomentar-la-curiosidad-creciente-de-los-ni-os-en-edad-preescolar.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo explica por qué la curiosidad en preescolar es clave para el aprendizaje en lenguaje, matemáticas y ciencias, y ofrece estrategias prácticas y basadas en evidencia —observación intencional, diseño del aula, rutinas predecibles y uso del juego/STEM— para convertir la curiosidad en una fortaleza del programa. También propone métodos concretos para documentar y evaluar (fotos, notas, portafolios), evitar errores comunes, involucrar a familias y personal mediante microformación y comunicaciones simples, y sugiere tres acciones inmediatas para empezar: observar 10 minutos, montar una invitación de indagación y compartir una foto con la familia.
]]></description>
<category>#curiosity</category>
<category>#preschoolers</category>
<category>#teachers</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:05:37 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo Crear una Cultura de Seguridad en Programas de Primera Infancia</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-primera-infancia-construir-una-cultura-de-seguridad.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía para directores y proveedores de programas de primera infancia muestra cómo crear una cultura de seguridad mediante políticas claras, rutinas consistentes, apoyo al personal, participación familiar y capacitación continua, ofreciendo acciones prácticas, plantillas y recursos para implementar hoy. Recomienda hábitos sencillos y repetidos —recorridos matutinos, inspecciones de emergencia, supervisión por zonas, microformación y simulacros breves—, medición con indicadores simples (comprobaciones firmadas, simulacros documentados, certificaciones de RCP, reportes de casi-accidentes) y comenzar con tres pasos inmediatos: recorrido diario, simulacro breve y enviar una síntesis de seguridad a las familias.
]]></description>
<category>#personal</category>
<category>#familias</category>
<category>#seguridad,</category>
<category>#personal,</category>
<category>#capacitación</category>
<category>#cultura</category>
<category>#seguridad</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:05:35 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo los Bebés Aprenden en Cada Rutina de Cuidado</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-aprenden-los-beb-s-a-trav-s-de-las-rutinas-cotidianas-de-cuidado.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El cuidado diario—alimentar, cambiar pañales, siestas, vestir y juego breve—son oportunidades repetidas de aprendizaje que, mediante interacción predecible (serve-and-return), andamiaje y modelado, fomentan el lenguaje, la autorregulación, las habilidades motoras y el comportamiento prosocial en los bebés.  
El artículo ofrece estrategias concretas para directores y cuidadores: rutinas y señales para cada momento (alimentación, cambio, siesta, juego, transiciones), ritmos de aula flexibles, cuidado primario, formación y políticas, registro y colaboración con familias, además de pasos prácticos para implementar de inmediato (relevos de 2 minutos, micro-coaching, role-plays y auditorías breves).
]]></description>
<category>#caregivers</category>
<category>#attachment,</category>
<category>#brain</category>
<category>#infant</category>
<category>#attachment</category>
<category>#trust</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:05:20 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo Fomentar la Independencia en Niños Pequeños sin Presionarlos</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-apoyar-la-independencia-de-los-ni-os-peque-os-sin-sobrecargarlos.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Fomentar la independencia en niños pequeños sin presionarlos requiere un diseño intencional del aula (muebles a escala, menos desorden visual, zonas claras y opciones sensoriales calmantes), rutinas predecibles con elecciones limitadas y apoyos visuales, y andamiaje adulto que ofrezca la ayuda mínima necesaria (modelar, esperar y elogiar el esfuerzo).  
Individualice mediante observación y metas pequeñas, coordine con las familias usando comunicación empática y herramientas prácticas, y evite hacer la tarea por el niño o imponer expectativas demasiado altas; celebre microéxitos y ajuste según las normas estatales.
]]></description>
<category>#independencia</category>
<category>#toddlers</category>
<category>#routines.</category>
<category>#teachers).</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#teachers</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:04:56 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 Understand and Use Developmental Milestones from Birth to Age Eight?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-understand-and-use-developmental-milestones-from-birth-to-age-eight.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide tells early childhood providers how to use age-band developmental milestones across domains (social-emotional, language, cognitive, motor, self‑help) to observe, document, and individualize curriculum from birth to age eight, using tools like CDC milestone checklists and ChildCareEd resources to spot strengths and gaps. It lays out practical steps—observe & document, analyze, plan targeted experiences, partner with families, screen and refer when red flags or regression occur—and emphasizes strengths‑based, family-centered communication, proper documentation, and acting early to connect children with interventions and services.
]]></description>
<category>#provider</category>
<category>#children—principles</category>
<category>#child’s</category>
<category>#development.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 15:03:02 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can early childhood programs effectively support children&#039;&#039;s oral health?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-early-childhood-programs-effectively-support-children-s-oral-health.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Early childhood programs can support children''s oral health by establishing realistic daily routines (infant gum wiping, supervised brushing with appropriate fluoride use), written policies, basic visual screenings, and community partnerships for varnish/sealant access while following state licensing and infection-control rules. Engaging families with culturally responsive education, classroom activities, clear documentation and referral protocols, and using CDC and ChildCareEd resources helps prevent decay, reduce disparities, and ensure timely dental care.
]]></description>
<category>#oralhealth.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:52:30 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>What are practical, healthy screen-time practices for young children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-are-practical-healthy-screen-time-practices-for-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guidance recommends simple, evidence-based, age-specific rules for early childhood programs — prioritize no screens for infants except live family video, allow very short, high-quality, adult‑led uses for 18–24 months, and plan 1–2 brief (≈10–15 min) teacher‑led screen moments for ages 2–5 that are always co‑viewed and immediately paired with hands‑on follow‑up; avoid screens during meals, snacks, and nap/quiet times and stop screens 30–60 minutes before sleep to protect language, behavior, and sleep.  
Put these practices into a one‑page family policy, staff training (co‑viewing, transitions, timers), monitoring logs, approved content lists, and simple family agreements — use ChildCareEd, CDC, AAP/Nemours resources for templates and evidence, and check your state licensing agency for requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#play;</category>
<category>#screentime</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:52:06 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare programs make transportation safe, inclusive, and compliant?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-programs-make-transportation-safe-inclusive-and-compliant.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide provides directors and providers an evidence‑informed, practical playbook for safe, inclusive, and compliant child transportation, covering required permissions, medical and leader packets, vehicle and car‑seat checks, assigned staff roles, active supervision, training, rehearsals, and emergency procedures. It emphasizes individualized plans for children with medical needs or disabilities, alignment with state licensing and national standards (CDC, Caring for Our Children), routine audits, and use of ChildCareEd resources and templates to make practices habitual and defensible.
]]></description>
<category>#permission</category>
<category>#transportation</category>
<category>#carseats</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#supervision</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:52:03 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare providers and families keep children safe around water?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-providers-and-families-keep-children-safe-around-water.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article gives program-ready guidance for childcare providers and families to prevent drowning and run safe water activities using overlapping layers of protection — four-sided barriers, a designated water watcher (touch supervision for infants/toddlers), U.S. Coast Guard–approved life jackets, swim competency, pediatric CPR/first-aid training, conservative staffing/ratios, equipment checks, rehearsed emergency roles, and clear family communication and documentation.  
It also outlines immediate response steps for a missing/submerged child (check water first, call 911, reach-or-throw rescue, begin pediatric rescue breaths/CPR and AED use), highlights common mistakes to avoid (distracted supervisors, reliance on inflatables), and directs programs to ChildCareEd/CDC/Red Cross resources while reminding them to follow state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#water.</category>
<category>#safety.</category>
<category>#CPR</category>
<category>#supervision</category>
<category>#CPR,</category>
<category>#safety</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:51:44 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 Young Children Safe in Cold Weather?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-keep-young-children-safe-in-cold-weather.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Child-care cold-weather safety requires measurable daily checks (use wind chill and wetness), a posted traffic-light decision chart, staffed roles for weather checks, staff training, stocked extra-gear kits, and age-appropriate layering and routines so infants and toddlers stay protected during outdoor play. Programs must also prepare and document frostbite/hypothermia response (warm, dry, gradual rewarming, call 911 when needed), communicate expectations and resources with families, and follow state licensing rules.
]]></description>
<category>#coldweather</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#outdoorplay,</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#layers.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:51:28 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 use safe diapering and toileting procedures to protect children and stay compliant?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-use-safe-diapering-and-toileting-procedures-to-protect-children-and-stay-compliant.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide summarizes evidence-based diapering and toileting procedures for child care programs—detailing step-by-step diaper changes, handwashing, cleaning vs. sanitizing vs. disinfecting, potty-training readiness, privacy, family communication, and practical checklists—aligned with CDC, CCDBG, and state licensing guidance. It stresses consistent posted procedures, staff training and documentation, correct cleaning-before-disinfecting and contact times, and common pitfalls (e.g., skipping cleaning or returning unsealed soiled clothing), and recommends daily logs and brief staff rehearsals to reduce illness, liability, and build parent trust.
]]></description>
<category>#diapering</category>
<category>#toileting</category>
<category>#handwashing,</category>
<category>#cleaning,</category>
<category>#hygiene</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:51:27 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 playgrounds safe for infants through school-age children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-keep-playgrounds-safe-for-infants-through-school-age-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical, evidence‑based guide helps child care programs keep playgrounds safe by detailing age‑appropriate design and equipment, the S.A.F.E. framework (supervision, age‑appropriate equipment, fall‑attenuating surfacing, maintenance), daily inspection and supervision routines, surfacing selection and upkeep, and layered controls for sun, pests, water, and weather.  
It also outlines immediate incident response, documentation and repair procedures, data‑driven near‑miss analysis, staff training priorities, five concrete actions to implement this week, and common pitfalls—while reminding programs to follow manufacturer, ASTM/state licensing, and parental‑permission requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#supervision,</category>
<category>#surfacing.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:50:58 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 heat-related illness during outdoor play?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-prevent-heat-related-illness-during-outdoor-play.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide gives practical, evidence-informed steps for child care programs to prevent heat-related illness during outdoor play, emphasizing quick pre-outdoor checks (temperature/heat index, air quality, lightning), a green/yellow/red decision rule, frequent hydration (every 10–15 minutes), shade and schedule adjustments, staged heat kits, and clear staff roles. It also covers recognition and emergency response for heat cramps, exhaustion, and heat stroke, plus documentation, policies, training, and alignment with state regulations using CDC, NIOSH/OSHA, and ChildCareEd tools for forecasting and staff refreshers.
]]></description>
<category>#heat,</category>
<category>#children, </category>
<category>#hydration,</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#outdoorplay.</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#outdoorplay</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:50:36 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 Teach Fire Safety Effectively to Young Children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-teach-fire-safety-effectively-to-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article outlines developmentally appropriate, practical strategies for teaching fire safety to young children—simple, repeatable rules (who firefighters are, avoid matches, stop/drop/roll, crawl low, know two exits, and call 911), hands‑on classroom activities (arts, stories, sensory games, firefighter visits), and the necessary equipment checks and staff training. It emphasizes regular, varied and documented drills, family engagement, individualized plans for children with mobility needs, and small policy changes (e.g., monthly drills or home escape maps) to build a calm, effective fire‑safety culture in early care settings.
]]></description>
<category>#firesafety</category>
<category>#drills,</category>
<category>#fireprevention</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#emergency.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:50:30 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare centers create effective emergency preparedness plans?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-centers-create-effective-emergency-preparedness-plans.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Childcare centers should create a short (1–2 page), visible, and regularly reviewed emergency plan with clearly assigned roles, simple numbered actions (Evacuate, Shelter‑in‑Place, Lockdown, Reunify), marked routes, and classroom Go‑Bags stocked with attendance/medical records, first aid, food/water, communication tools, and sanitation supplies. Train staff (including pediatric CPR/First Aid), run age‑appropriate, trauma‑informed drills, use redundant communication and strict verification for reunification, document drills and maintenance, and consult state licensing and local responders for templates and requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#children,</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#preparedness,</category>
<category>#GoBag</category>
<category>#reunification</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:49:18 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Which Handwashing Activities Best Help Young Children Build Healthy Habits?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/which-handwashing-activities-best-help-young-children-build-healthy-habits.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Handwashing is a simple, low-cost, high-impact practice for early care programs: teach the five repeatable steps (wet, lather/scrub 20s, rinse, dry) using short activities (glitter/GloGerm, pepper/soap, step cards, songs), fixed routines (5–7 key times), reachable sinks, and consistent coaching so children learn technique and gain independence. Pair these classroom strategies with supply readiness, supervision, cleaning/diapering and illness policies, and clear family communication to sustain habits, reduce infections and absenteeism, and meet licensing or public-health guidance.
]]></description>
<category>#handwashing</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#hygiene</category>
<category>#health.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:40:47 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare programs prevent choking and keep mealtimes safe?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-programs-prevent-choking-and-keep-mealtimes-safe.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guidance explains practical, research‑informed measures child care programs should use to prevent choking — including hazard identification, age‑appropriate food preparation and serving, active supervision, and environmental checks — plus policies like posted checklists and routine inspections to reduce risks. It also emphasizes staff readiness through hands‑on CPR/choking training, regular drills, clear emergency procedures (age‑specific back blows, chest thrusts, abdominal thrusts), post‑incident medical evaluation and documentation, and aligning practices with state licensing and national standards.
]]></description>
<category>#supervision,</category>
<category>#CPR</category>
<category>#choking</category>
<category>#mealtime</category>
<category>#safety</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:40:27 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can daily health and safety checks keep my early childhood program safer?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-daily-health-and-safety-checks-keep-my-early-childhood-program-safer.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Daily, brief health and safety checks at drop-off—using a friendly, scripted routine to observe behavior, temperature/respiratory and gastrointestinal symptoms, skin/wounds, and quick environmental hazards—catch early signs of illness, slow transmission, and strengthen family trust while aligning with licensing and national guidance.  
Couple these checks with short standardized documentation (child file, classroom log, program records), clear exclusion/isolation rules and parent scripts, secure retention, weekly trend review, prompt cleaning and public‑health coordination, and staff training to prevent outbreaks and avoid common pitfalls; remember state requirements vary, so check your state licensing agency.
]]></description>
<category>#health</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#providers,</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#documentation</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:40:17 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can child care programs build effective food allergy awareness and emergency response plans?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-build-effective-food-allergy-awareness-and-emergency-response-plans.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Child care programs should implement a comprehensive food allergy management plan—centered on physician‑signed Allergy/Emergency Action Plans, clear medication policies, daily prevention routines (handwashing, labeled foods, no sharing), and private but visible one‑page plans—to prevent exposure and ensure rapid, life‑saving response to anaphylaxis.  
Programs must train multiple staff with hands‑on epinephrine practice and regular drills, partner with families through clear intake and communication procedures, document and verify routines, and follow state laws (including stock epinephrine rules) using available templates and checklists to reduce errors and liability.
]]></description>
<category>#allergy</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#epinephrine</category>
<category>#safety</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:40:00 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare providers safely and confidently administer medication?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-providers-safely-and-confidently-administer-medication.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical, evidence-informed guide explains how early childhood programs can safely administer medication by establishing clear written policies, implementing the Six (or Five) Rights into repeatable routines (receipt, storage, dose preparation, administration, and immediate documentation), providing documented staff training and competency checks, and creating individualized emergency plans for chronic conditions and field trips.  
It also highlights common errors—signing before administration, unlabeled or unauthorized meds, improper dosing tools, and inadequate substitute training—and recommends fixes such as refusing unlabeled meds, using pharmacy syringes, conducting MAR audits, scheduling MAT refreshers, and checking state rules for stock epinephrine and other legal requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#medication</category>
<category>#documentation</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#children.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:54 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 consistently implement safe sleep practices for infants and toddlers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-consistently-implement-safe-sleep-practices-for-infants-and-toddlers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article gives practical, evidence-based safe-sleep guidance for child care providers—grounded in AAP and CDC recommendations—including back-to-sleep positioning, firm bare sleep surfaces, approved equipment, active supervision, documentation, and emergency preparedness to reduce SIDS and sleep-related incidents.  
It also stresses program-level policies, staff training and certification, family communication, routine audits, and requiring written medical exceptions so centers can consistently implement these practices, build trust, and comply with licensing expectations.
]]></description>
<category>#toddlers</category>
<category>#safe,</category>
<category>#SIDS</category>
<category>#childcare</category>
<category>#safe</category>
<category>#sleep</category>
<category>#infants</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:39 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Sueño Seguro para Bebés: Cómo Prevenir el SIDS en el Cuidado Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-programas-de-cuidado-infantil-prevenir-de-forma-confiable-el-sids-durante-el-cuidado-de-lactantes.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo ofrece pasos prácticos y auditables para que los programas de cuidado infantil prevengan el SIDS: adopte las ABCs (Alone, Back, Crib), implemente políticas escritas breves, capacitación acreditada y documentada del personal, listas de verificación diarias y auditorías regulares para convertir la intención en práctica confiable. Maneje las excepciones sólo con orden médica firmada y consentimiento parental, comunique con empatía a las familias y diseñe el ambiente y la supervisión (cunas visibles, revisiones periódicas, sin objetos sueltos) para que la opción segura sea la más fácil.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:34 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare programs reliably prevent SIDS during infant care?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-programs-reliably-prevent-sids-during-infant-care.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Childcare programs can substantially reduce SIDS/SUID risk by implementing evidence-based "ABCs" (Alone, Back, Crib) and AAP/CDC environmental rules, paired with mandatory competency-based training, clear one-page policies, consistent monitoring, and rigorous documentation. Practical steps include posting rules, requiring accredited safe-sleep and CPR certification for all caregivers, using crib checklists and nap logs, accepting alternate positioning only with a signed physician order, auditing compliance regularly, and communicating policies empathically to families.
]]></description>
<category>#SafeSleep</category>
<category>#SIDS</category>
<category>#Infants</category>
<category>#Providers</category>
<category>#Crib.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:34 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Emergencias Médicas en la Infancia: Cómo Reconocer y Responder a Tiempo</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-reconocer-y-responder-a-emergencias-m-dicas-en-la-infancia.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía práctica ayuda a directores y proveedores a reconocer rápidamente emergencias médicas infantiles (dificultad respiratoria, alteración de la conciencia, cianosis, convulsiones, anafilaxia), actuar de forma ordenada (pedir ayuda, iniciar RCP/maniobra de desobstrucción, administrar epinefrina según indicación, usar EPP) y coordinar la comunicación con EMS y las familias.  
Además detalla cómo documentar y reportar con precisión, qué capacitación, suministros y planes mantener (certificaciones en primeros auxilios/RCP, Go-Bags, políticas de medicación, simulacros y coordinación comunitaria) para reducir riesgos y apoyar la recuperación; ante duda, llame al 911 y verifique los requisitos estatales.
]]></description>
<category>#emergencias</category>
<category>#emergency</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#documentation.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:32 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 and respond to childhood medical emergencies?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-recognize-and-respond-to-childhood-medical-emergencies.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical guide teaches child care providers to recognize childhood medical emergencies—red flags include respiratory distress, altered consciousness, cyanosis or severe bleeding, focal neurologic signs/seizure, and anaphylaxis—and to act immediately by getting adult help, beginning care per training (CPR, choking maneuvers, epinephrine as indicated), ensuring safety and supervision, and calling 911 when breathing or consciousness is compromised.  
It also outlines same-day objective documentation and communication, required training and supplies (Go-bags, medication policies, written emergency plans), risk-reduction and post-event support strategies, and simple next-day priorities (update a policy, check a Go-Bag, schedule a short skills refresh), while urging use of ChildCareEd/Red Cross/CDC resources and adherence to state licensing rules.
]]></description>
<category>#emergencies,</category>
<category>#emergency</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#documentation.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:32 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo Prevenir la Propagación de Enfermedades en Centros de Cuidado Infantil</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-centros-de-cuidado-infantil-prevenir-la-propagaci-n-de-enfermedades.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo ofrece pasos prácticos y basados en evidencia para prevenir la propagación de enfermedades en centros de cuidado infantil, destacando la importancia de rutinas diarias, políticas claras, capacitación del personal y comunicación con familias y salud pública.  
Incluye medidas concretas —lavado de manos programado, cribado en la llegada, limpieza/sanitización/desinfección según el CDC, manejo de juguetes que van a la boca, apoyo a la vacunación, mejora de la ventilación, políticas de exclusión y protocolos de respuesta a brotes— y remite a plantillas y cursos de ChildCareEd y guías del CDC (ver requisitos estatales).
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#handwashing.</category>
<category>#cleaning</category>
<category>#ventilation</category>
<category>#handwashing,</category>
<category>#policy</category>
<category>#cleaning,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:30 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can childcare settings prevent the spread of illness?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-childcare-settings-prevent-the-spread-of-illness.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Preventing illness in childcare depends on simple, routinely practiced leadership actions—consistent hand hygiene, arrival screening, cleaning/sanitizing/disinfecting protocols, vaccination encouragement, ventilation improvements, and supportive policies (paid sick leave, clear exclusion/return rules)—to reduce missed days and keep programs operating. The guidance emphasizes short, visible family handouts and staff policies, documented screening and cleaning schedules, an isolation/outbreak plan with early notification of local public health, and ready-to-use templates and trainings from ChildCareEd and the CDC to implement these steps quickly.
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#handwashing</category>
<category>#cleaning</category>
<category>#ventilation</category>
<category>#handwashing,</category>
<category>#policy,</category>
<category>#cleaning,</category>
<category>#ventilation,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:30 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Entornos Seguros en la Guardería: Cómo Proteger a Cada Grupo de Edad</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedo-crear-un-entorno-seguro-en-la-guarder-a-para-cada-grupo-de-edad.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía ofrece pasos prácticos y basados en evidencia para diseñar entornos seguros en guarderías según edades (bebés, niños pequeños, preescolares y escolares), priorizando diseño físico, supervisión activa, higiene, normas de sueño seguro para bebés y preparación para emergencias, y remite a recursos de ChildCareEd y CDC.  
Acciones clave: auditar a la altura del niño y zonificar espacios, definir roles y prácticas de supervisión (conteos y estrategias diarias), aplicar protocolos de limpieza (limpiar→sanitizar→desinfectar), exigir RCP/primeros auxilios pediátricos, documentar alimentación y sueño de bebés y practicar planes de emergencia y patio.
]]></description>
<category>#supervisión.</category>
<category>#children</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:16 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can I create a safe childcare environment for every age group?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-create-a-safe-childcare-environment-for-every-age-group.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide provides practical, evidence-informed steps to create a safe childcare environment for infants through school-age children by prioritizing age-appropriate space design, active supervision strategies, hygiene and illness protocols, infant-specific safe sleep and feeding practices, and emergency/playground preparedness. It emphasizes simple daily routines (10-minute safety sweeps, zone maps, checklists), staff training (First Aid/CPR, SIDS/safe-sleep), standardized cleaning (clean→sanitize→disinfect), drills, clear family communication, and adherence to state licensing requirements to reduce risk and improve consistency.
]]></description>
<category>#supervision.</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#supervision</category>
<category>#cleaning</category>
<category>#infants</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 14:39:16 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Minnesota child care programs cover staff breaks and stay in ratio?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-minnesota-child-care-programs-cover-staff-breaks-and-stay-in-ratio.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
A practical Minnesota-focused guide showing how to cover staff breaks without falling out of ratio by knowing and posting the correct license-specific age-based ratios, using a daily floater/rover, staggering breaks with built-in overlap, zoning rooms for accountability, and rehearsing transitions. Keep inspection-ready documentation (Today Folder, break logs, scanned staff files and Develop Registry IDs), run brief pre-shift huddles, avoid common pitfalls (unqualified staff, transition lapses, missing records), and follow the seven quick steps to protect child safety, licensing, and workforce stability.
]]></description>
<category>#Minnesota</category>
<category>#ratios,</category>
<category>#breaks</category>
<category>#staffing</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:51:09 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Pennsylvania child care programs cover staff breaks and always stay in ratio?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-pennsylvania-child-care-programs-cover-staff-breaks-and-always-stay-in-ratio.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical, inspection-ready guide explains how Pennsylvania child care programs can cover staff breaks while always staying in ratio by following state rules (55 Pa. Code Chapter 3270) and using simple tools—live rosters, age-based counts, staggered breaks, named floaters, nap-zone procedures, and pre-shift huddles.  
It also details required documentation and trainings, common mistakes and fixes, and a three-step starter checklist (post a ratio chart, stagger a break and name a floater, create a "Staffing & Ratios" binder) to improve safety, compliance, and staff stability.
]]></description>
<category>#Pennsylvania</category>
<category>#ratios.</category>
<category>#supervision</category>
<category>#ratios</category>
<category>#roster,</category>
<category>#ratios,</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:50:45 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can Oklahoma child care programs cover staff breaks and always stay in ratio?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-oklahoma-child-care-programs-cover-staff-breaks-and-always-stay-in-ratio.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This Oklahoma-focused guide gives child care directors and lead teachers a practical, inspection-ready staffing plan to cover staff breaks and maintain required age-based ratios, with concrete steps such as identifying program type, posting ratios, staggering breaks, assigning floaters/zone staffing, and keeping a substitution ladder. It also details daily tools (live rosters, break logs, personnel files), emergency and mixed-age procedures, monthly drills, and a one-week action checklist to implement immediately and remain compliant with OKDHS requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#ratios</category>
<category>#staffing</category>
<category>#supervision.</category>
<category>#documentation</category>
<category>#substitutes</category>
<category>#supervision</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:49:48 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Capacitación Gratuita en Línea sobre Cuidado Infantil en Utah: Obtenga un Certificado</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-en-utah-obtener-capacitaci-n-en-l-nea-gratuita-y-ganar-certificados.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía muestra dónde los proveedores de cuidado infantil en Utah pueden encontrar capacitaciones en línea gratuitas o económicas (p. ej. ChildCareEd, URPD/Care About Childcare, CCRAs, universidades y plataformas nacionales) que otorgan certificados o CEUs y explica cómo esas horas pueden usarse para el CDA y para avanzar en la Escalera de Carrera de Utah.  
Incluye pasos prácticos: confirmar aprobación del curso, buscar cohortes y becas con su CCRA regional, completar horas y experiencia requeridas, subir certificados al perfil URPD/Care About Childcare y evitar errores comunes como tomar cursos no aprobados.
]]></description>
<category>#Utah</category>
<category>#formacion</category>
<category>#ChildcareEd</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#certificado</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:41:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Free Online Child Care Training in Utah: Earn a Certificate</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-utah-child-care-providers-get-free-online-training-and-earn-certificates.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains where Utah child care providers can find free or low‑cost online trainings (e.g., ChildCareEd, URPD/Care About Childcare, regional CCRAs, Prevent Child Abuse Utah and national platforms), how those trainings can contribute to CDA and Career Ladder credits, and how to combine cohort supports and scholarships to complete credential pathways. It gives practical steps for documenting hours—create or update your URPD/Care About Childcare profile, upload certificates promptly, choose URPD‑approved courses, contact your regional CCRA for cohorts and funding—and warns to avoid non‑approved courses, missed uploads, and incorrect subject‑area hours.
]]></description>
<category>#Utah</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#ChildcareEd</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#certificate</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:41:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Capacitación Gratuita en Línea sobre Cuidado Infantil en Washington: Obtenga un Certificado</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/d-nde-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-de-washington-encontrar-formaci-n-en-l-nea-gratuita-para-obtener-un-certificado.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía práctica para programas de cuidado infantil en Washington explica cómo usar formaciones en línea gratuitas o de bajo costo (p. ej. ChildCareEd, CDC Watch Me!, Cruz Roja y colegios comunitarios) para obtener certificados verificables, CEUs y avanzar hacia credenciales como el CDA, advirtiendo que los requisitos estatales varían y deben confirmarse con la agencia de licencias.  
Ofrece pasos concretos para convertir horas en créditos MERIT/STARS (verificar aprobación antes de inscribirse, descargar y archivar certificados, y subir comprobantes o confirmar registro por el proveedor), consejos de planificación y documentación (bloquear tiempo, cursos cortos, administrar grupos, hoja de seguimiento) y tres acciones inmediatas: inscribir a un empleado en un curso gratuito, crear una hoja de seguimiento y confirmar la aceptación MERIT/STARS del curso.
]]></description>
<category>#proveedores</category>
<category>#certificado</category>
<category>#CDA,</category>
<category>#entrenamiento</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:39:52 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Free Online Child Care Training in Washington: Earn a Certificate</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/where-can-washington-child-care-providers-find-free-online-training-to-earn-a-certificate.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical Washington-focused guide lists free and low-cost online child care trainings (ChildCareEd, CDC Watch Me!, Red Cross, community colleges) that offer verifiable CEUs/certificates and can count toward MERIT/STARS, CPR/First Aid, and CDA pathways when state/vendor approval is confirmed. It provides actionable, numbered steps to plan and document training (verify approval, download and back up certificates, maintain a one-page tracker, schedule protected training time, use group admin/subscriptions, seek scholarships/college credit), highlights common pitfalls, and recommends three immediate actions: enroll in a free course, create a tracker, and confirm MERIT/STARS acceptance.
]]></description>
<category>#providers:</category>
<category>#certificate,</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:39:52 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Capacitación Gratuita en Línea sobre Cuidado Infantil en Idaho: Obtenga un Certificado</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/puedo-obtener-un-certificado-con-formaci-n-gratuita-en-l-nea-para-cuidado-infantil-en-idaho.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo explica cómo y dónde los proveedores de cuidado infantil en Idaho pueden completar formación gratuita en línea y obtener certificados válidos para licencias, IdahoSTARS o la credencial CDA, señalando portales aprobados como ChildCareEd Idaho, la importancia de que los cursos otorguen CEU/horas aceptadas y que ciertos cursos (p. ej. CPR/First Aid) pueden requerir componente presencial.  
Recomienda priorizar salud y seguridad, desarrollo infantil e inclusión; centralizar registros, subir certificados a RISE, usar herramientas de gestión y compras grupales para asegurar cumplimiento y evitar cursos no aceptados o sin crédito CEU.
]]></description>
<category>#proveedores</category>
<category>#CDA:</category>
<category>#CDA. </category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:39:34 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Free Online Child Care Training in Idaho: Earn a Certificate</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-i-earn-a-certificate-with-free-online-child-care-training-in-idaho.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Idaho providers can earn certificates from free online child care trainings, but only courses from Idaho‑approved providers or those that document CEUs/clock‑hours (not just simple completion certificates) will count for licensing, IdahoSTARS, or the CDA pathway—start with the ChildCareEd Idaho portal and upload certificates to RISE.  
Prioritize required health & safety (CPR/first aid), child development, inclusion, and CDA‑aligned coursework, and have directors centralize records, use group administration tools, schedule paid training time, and follow a short audit/checklist to stay compliant and advance staff credentials.
]]></description>
<category>#providers. </category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#CDA,</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:39:34 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Capacitación Gratuita en Línea sobre Cuidado Infantil en Nuevo México: Obtenga un Certificado</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-de-nuevo-m-xico-acceder-a-formaci-n-online-gratuita-y-obtener-un-certificado.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía práctica explica cómo encontrar cursos online gratuitos o de bajo costo que emiten certificados aceptables en Nuevo México, cómo verificarlos frente a la normativa estatal (NMAC) y la credencial CDA, y cómo documentar la formación para auditorías y expedientes del personal.  
Incluye recursos curados (especialmente ChildCareEd NM y CDC Watch Me!), checklists y un flujo de trabajo para inscribir y registrar al personal, vías de financiación y trayectorias universitarias, y tres pasos concretos para implementar esta semana (actualizar calendario, crear expedientes físico+digital y promover candidaturas a CDA/ certificaciones).
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:39:28 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Free Online Child Care Training in New Mexico: Earn a Certificate</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-new-mexico-child-care-providers-get-free-online-training-and-earn-a-certificate.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical guide shows New Mexico child care directors and providers how to find reputable free or low-cost online trainings that issue certificates, verify they meet state licensing and CDA requirements (using resources like ChildCareEd, CDC TRAIN, and the New Mexico trainer registry), and what to check on each course (hours, trainer approval, topic alignment). It also gives step-by-step workflows for enrolling staff, documenting certificates for audits, maintaining renewal calendars, accessing funding and college pathways, avoiding common pitfalls, and three immediate actions to implement this week (create a training calendar, consolidate personnel files, and identify staff for CDA or 90-hour certificates).
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:39:28 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Can Oregon Child Care Providers Earn Free Online Certificates Easily?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-oregon-child-care-providers-earn-free-online-certificates-easily.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Oregon child care providers can access many free or low-cost online trainings—especially via ChildCareEd and national resources like the CDC and Red Cross—to earn certificates, meet health/safety and continuing education requirements, and begin pathways toward the CDA (though some assessment and comprehensive CDA components may carry fees).  
Programs should verify state acceptance of CEUs, carefully document completions, combine free modules with paid bundles or scholarships as needed for the 120-hour CDA pathway, and use planned training calendars, tracking tools, and local CCR&R or licensing supports to ensure compliance and staff development.
]]></description>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#certificates</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#childcare</category>
<category>#certificate</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:39:18 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Capacitación Gratuita en Línea sobre Cuidado Infantil en Alaska: Obtenga un Certificado</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/pueden-los-proveedores-de-cuidado-infantil-en-alaska-obtener-certificados-con-capacitaciones-gratuitas-en-l-nea.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Este artículo explica dónde encontrar capacitaciones en línea gratuitas para proveedores de cuidado infantil en Alaska —principalmente a través de ChildCareEd— qué cursos útiles hay (p. ej. Health & Safety Orientation, CPR/First Aid, módulos CDA), y cómo obtener certificados al completar lecciones y evaluaciones para descargar el PDF. También aclara que la aceptación en Alaska depende de reconocimiento por NWRA/SEED/TTAS y de figurar en la lista estatal aprobada, y ofrece pasos prácticos para inscribirse, documentar, renovar la formación, evitar errores comunes y acciones inmediatas como inscribirse en una orientación aprobada y cargar certificados en Alaska SEED.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:36:45 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Free Online Child Care Training in Alaska: Earn a Certificate</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-alaska-child-care-providers-earn-free-online-training-certificates.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd offers free and low‑cost online trainings (including Health & Safety Orientation, pediatric CPR/First Aid, and CDA introductory modules) that issue certificates and are often accepted for Alaska licensing when they are NWRA‑recognized or listed on the state‑approved trainings page. The article outlines how to find/enroll via the Alaska catalog, earn and document certificates, verify state acceptance, avoid common mistakes (save PDFs, confirm approvals, set renewal reminders), and gives immediate action steps to enroll and track staff training.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:36:45 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Can Michigan Child Care Providers Support Toddlers Through the “No” Phase?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-michigan-child-care-providers-support-toddlers-through-the-no-phase.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This practical, research-informed guide for Michigan child care providers reframes the toddler "no" phase as developmentally normal—an expression of autonomy, limited communication, and cause-and-effect learning—and emphasizes empathy, predictability, and teaching replacement skills to turn refusals into learning opportunities. It outlines classroom strategies (limited choices, First–Then prompts, naming feelings, routines, visual cues, calming skills), family partnership and documentation tips, training resources, and common pitfalls so programs can reduce power struggles, meet state training/licensing expectations, and support toddlers'' self-regulation.
]]></description>
<category>#toddlers</category>
<category>#no</category>
<category>#transitions</category>
<category>#Michigan</category>
<category>#10).</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 12:13:06 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How do I build an effective emergency preparedness plan for my Kansas child care program?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-build-an-effective-emergency-preparedness-plan-for-my-kansas-child-care-program.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how Kansas child care programs can build a usable, compliant all‑hazards emergency preparedness plan—aligned with K.A.R. and K.S.A. requirements—by documenting evacuation, shelter‑in‑place, lockdown, reunification, medical/special‑needs procedures, supplies, communication plans, evacuation routes, and designated staff roles.  
It emphasizes regular drills and staff training, coordination with local responders, practical templates and Go‑Kits (ChildCareEd, FEMA, CDC), and simple actionable first steps (review regulations, adapt a template, assemble kits, assign roles, run tabletop and evacuation exercises) to ensure readiness, continuity, and safe reunification.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 12:12:51 GMT</pubDate>
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