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<title>How Can North Dakota Providers Respond to Toddler Biting Without Shaming?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-north-dakota-providers-respond-to-toddler-biting-without-shaming.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide shows North Dakota child care providers how to respond to toddler biting without shaming by using a calm, consistent routine—comfort the bitten child, give the biter 1–2 short factual sentences (e.g., “You bit. Biting hurts.”), teach replacement skills during calm times, document only facts, and communicate neutrally with families while following state licensing rules.  
It also outlines prevention (observe patterns, modify the environment, teach one skill at a time, offer safe oral options, and increase supervision), when to involve directors or mental health/PCIT referrals, common mistakes to avoid, and practical staff messaging for safety and consistency.
]]></description>
<category>#biting</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#toddlers</category>
<category>#prevention.</category>
<category>#toddlers.</category>
<category>#prevention</category>
<category>#communication</category>
<category>#safety.</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 13:16:58 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Can I Reduce Staff Turnover at My Michigan Childcare Center?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-reduce-staff-turnover-at-my-michigan-childcare-center.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article outlines practical, low-cost and longer-term strategies to reduce staff turnover at Michigan childcare centers, including quick actions (daily 1–2 minute check-ins, micro-breaks, paperwork cuts, recognition), budget-smart pay and benefits, bulk training, clear career ladders, and systems changes to prevent burnout. It advises pairing training with coaching, using transparent wage steps and available grants, tracking progress with pulse surveys and Group Admin tools, and prioritizing ongoing schedule and policy fixes rather than one-off wellness events while checking state licensing and funding options.
]]></description>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#retention,</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
<category>#stress.</category>
<category>#retention</category>
<category>#wellbeing</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 13:15:56 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Can Minnesota Childcare Providers Plan a Week of Activities for Mixed-Age Groups?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-minnesota-childcare-providers-plan-a-week-of-activities-for-mixed-age-groups.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide for Minnesota childcare providers shows how to design a clear, kind, and layered weekly plan for mixed-age groups (6 months–5 years) — offering a simple daily rhythm (arrival/circle, long choice/work block, snack/outdoor, small groups/rest, closing), themed centers with 2–3 activity levels per age, tray-based materials, staffing and supervision strategies, safety rules, and fixes for common problems.  
It also outlines quick assessment methods, family communication and inclusion, brief staff huddles and training ideas, points to ChildCareEd and research resources, and encourages starting small while following state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#planning</category>
<category>#Minnesota</category>
<category>#mixedage</category>
<category>#activities</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 13:15:48 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can Michigan childcare providers build trust with families from day one?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-michigan-childcare-providers-build-trust-with-families-from-day-one.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide helps Michigan child care leaders build trust from day one through simple, consistent practices — a warm welcome and goodbye ritual, a one-page welcome sheet, brief drop-off orientation, daily highlights (meal, mood, one learning moment), photos with permission, and scripts for hard conversations that start with strengths and facts. It also recommends using Michigan resources and systems (ChildCareEd trainings, Great Start to Quality, standard forms, role-play, and monthly reviews), checking state licensing requirements, and following a one-week action plan to make these habits routine.
]]></description>
<category>#communication,</category>
<category>#Michigan</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#trust</category>
<category>#communication</category>
<category>#children</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 13:15:20 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Why Do the First Five Years Matter for Michigan Children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/why-do-the-first-five-years-matter-for-michigan-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The first five years are a critical period of rapid brain growth—especially in Michigan, where higher child poverty and community stress increase risk—and early childhood programs can change life trajectories by providing warm relationships, predictable routines, long play blocks, good nutrition, open-ended materials, and targeted staff training. Practical steps for programs include using serve-and-return talk, making meals learning moments, scheduling uninterrupted play, monitoring milestones with CDC tools, connecting families to early intervention and local supports, and using resources like ChildCareEd, CSEFEL, and state agencies to train staff and guide families.
]]></description>
<category>#Michigan,</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#play,</category>
<category>#brain</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 13:15:01 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Does Temperament Affect How Minnesota Children Learn and Behave?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-does-temperament-affect-how-minnesota-children-learn-and-behave.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Temperament is a child’s natural way of reacting (activity, regularity, sensitivity, approach, intensity) and recognizing these traits helps Minnesota early‑care providers create a “goodness of fit” by using predictable routines, choice and safe spaces, short calm directions, planned transitions, emotion coaching, and family partnership to lower stress, support social‑emotional learning, and boost school readiness.  
When behaviors are unusually intense, persistent, or interfere with learning, programs should use screening tools and multi‑tiered supports (PBIS/Pyramid Model), consult mental‑health or early‑intervention specialists, and pursue local trainings and ChildCareEd resources while following state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#Minnesota</category>
<category>#behavior?</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#temperament</category>
<category>#learning</category>
<category>#behavior</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 13:14:53 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can Minnesota childcare programs build a strong team culture?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-minnesota-childcare-programs-build-a-strong-team-culture.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Minnesota childcare programs can build strong team culture by posting shared values, running brief daily check‑ins and weekly shout‑outs, using a 30–60–90 onboarding with role cards and buddies, pairing short trainings with on‑the‑floor coaching and recognition, and leveraging local funding, safety tools, and community partners. These small, consistent steps clarify expectations, support staff growth and wellbeing, reduce turnover, and improve program stability and outcomes for children and families.
]]></description>
<category>#Minnesota</category>
<category>#team</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
<category>#retention.</category>
<category>#staff.</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 13:14:46 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Can Early Educators Become a Child Care Director in Washington?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-early-educators-become-a-child-care-director-in-washington.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide explains how early educators in Washington can become child care directors by meeting common state expectations—typically completing college credits or an associate degree in early childhood, gaining about two years of licensed childcare experience, finishing a state‑approved director/administrator training (such as the 45‑hour course), and passing required background, health, and safety checks (CPR/First Aid, mandated reporter, fingerprint clearances, etc.). 

It also gives practical program-management steps—use MERIT/STARS‑approved trainings, maintain a licensing binder and one‑page training tracker, implement structured onboarding and staff check‑ins, avoid common mistakes (non‑approved courses, lost certificates, last‑minute renewals), and consult DCYF, RCW 43.216, and ChildCareEd for specific Washington requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#director.</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#staff.</category>
<category>#director</category>
<category>#Washington</category>
<category>#licensing</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:13:55 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Do I Become a Child Care Director in Nevada?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-child-care-director-in-nevada-1.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide summarizes Nevada steps to become an approved child care director: read NAC/NRS Chapter 432A, get Division approval, complete fingerprint/background checks, keep required records, and consult your licensing specialist.  
Prepare with director- and child-development training (common credentials: CDA, 45-hour Director Administration, pediatric CPR/First Aid, medication and safe-sleep training), track certificates in personnel files and the Nevada Registry, stay inspection-ready with organized trackers and digital backups, and pursue funding through CCR&R, T.E.A.C.H., or state/CCDF grants.
]]></description>
<category>#Nevada</category>
<category>#children.</category>
<category>#leadership.</category>
<category>#compliant</category>
<category>#director</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:12:48 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How do I become a child care director in Texas?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-child-care-director-in-texas-1.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how to become a licensed child care director in Texas, outlining age (21+), acceptable education/experience pathways (bachelor’s, associate, 60 college credits, or approved director/CDA credentials combined with required licensed center experience), and the documents you must keep (diplomas, transcripts, CPR/First Aid, clear background checks). It also summarizes how to apply and be designated with HHSC forms, stay current through required annual training (typically 30 hours) and renewals, avoid common paperwork and credential mistakes, and where to get help from HHSC, ChildCareEd, and local colleges.
]]></description>
<category>#director</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#credential</category>
<category>#Texas</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:12:33 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Do I Become a Child Care Director in Georgia?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-child-care-director-in-georgia.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide outlines the steps to become a child care director in Georgia, including basic requirements (age/education), criminal background checks and fingerprinting, pediatric CPR/First Aid, a state‑approved 40‑hour director training, ongoing GaPDS‑tracked professional development, and education options (CDA, associate, or bachelor’s) with funding help like DECAL Scholars. It also recommends 1–3 years of classroom experience plus leadership tasks, building administrative skills (budgeting, hiring, recordkeeping), keeping compliance systems and licensing binders up to date, and using local resources (DECAL, CCR&R, ChildCareEd) to prepare applications and stay inspection‑ready.
]]></description>
<category>#Georgia.</category>
<category>#Georgia,</category>
<category>#director,</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#compliance,</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:12:10 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How do I become a child care director in Oklahoma — training, experience, and next steps?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-child-care-director-in-oklahoma-training-experience-and-next-steps.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
To become a child care director in Oklahoma you must meet OKDHS licensing and the Director’s Credential requirements—typically a high school diploma/GED, early childhood coursework or a CDA, administration training (e.g., 45-hour director/admin), required health and safety trainings, fingerprint-based background checks, and documented childcare leadership experience—then apply to OKDHS for director approval.  
Create a 6–12 month plan using state-approved, OPDR-posting online courses (e.g., ChildCareEd and local colleges), seek scholarships and local resource-and-referral support, track certificates and OPDR IDs to avoid nonapproved training, and keep clear records to streamline credentialing and renewals.
]]></description>
<category>#Oklahoma</category>
<category>#Director</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#licensing</category>
<category>#CDA.</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:11:47 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How do I become a child care director in California?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-child-care-director-in-california-1.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
To become a child care director in California, follow the Child Development Permit ladder by completing the required education (often BA plus ECE/admin units or specific AA routes), gain 3–4 years of verified licensed experience, and obtain mandatory health and safety clearances and trainings (Pediatric First Aid & CPR, Preventive Health, Mandated Reporter, Live Scan fingerprint, TB clearance).  
Gather and save transcripts, job verification, and certificates, apply to the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing for the correct permit, track professional growth for renewal (typically 105 hours every five years), use state‑approved courses (e.g., ChildCareEd), and avoid common mistakes like expired certificates or non‑approved trainings.
]]></description>
<category>#Director</category>
<category>#California</category>
<category>#Permit</category>
<category>#Training</category>
<category>#Leadership</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:11:06 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Can Educators Prepare to Become a Child Care Director in Florida?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-educators-prepare-to-become-a-child-care-director-in-florida.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article outlines a clear path to become a child care director in Florida, covering required education/experience, obtaining the Florida Director Credential via an approved "Overview of Child Care Management" course, completing 30–45 hours of state training, Level 2 fingerprint background screening, CPR/First Aid, and submitting documents to the Florida DCF while keeping copies of all certificates and transcripts.  
It also advises building leadership, budgeting, and curriculum skills through mentoring, approved fast-track or college programs, tracking renewal/in-service requirements, and avoiding common mistakes like enrolling in non-DCF-approved courses or losing documentation.
]]></description>
<category>#Florida</category>
<category>#director.</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#director</category>
<category>#licensing</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:11:05 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How do I become a child care director in DC?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-child-care-director-in-dc.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
To become a child care director in Washington, DC, you must meet age and education requirements, complete required preservice and annual health-and-safety trainings (safe sleep, medication, abuse reporting, infectious disease), finish director-specific coursework or a 40–45 hour director program (or equivalent certificate/degree), pass background checks/fingerprinting, and keep organized staff files of OSSE‑approved certificates for licensing inspections.  
Plan by using short OSSE‑approved online modules and bundles, track progress with a simple spreadsheet, seek employer support or scholarships, avoid non‑approved courses and lost certificates, and contact OSSE or local Child Care Resource & Referral agencies when you need clarification.
]]></description>
<category>#DC</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#director</category>
<category>#DC?</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#licensing</category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:10:47 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>🌴 CPR FOR SUMMER, CONFIDENCE FOR A LIFETIME</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/coupon-2026SUMCPR10-cpr-for-summer-confidence-for-a-lifetime.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[From the classroom to the healthcare setting, CPR skills make a difference every day. Take advantage of our Summer CPR Savings and save $10 on Blended and In-Person CPR training.]]></description>
<category>coupons</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 20:21:44 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="info@childcareed.com">info@childcareed.com</source>
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<item>
<title>How can professional development help early childhood educators and centers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-professional-development-help-early-childhood-educators-and-centers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Professional development boosts teacher confidence, improves classroom quality, and leads to better child outcomes when it is planned, sustained, and tied to clear goals—using a mix of self-paced online courses, short workshops, coaching, and learning communities. Build affordable, effective PD by choosing 1–2 focused goals, measuring change, protecting short regular learning time, combining free/low-cost resources with peer coaching, and following up to turn training into practice.
]]></description>
<category>#professionaldevelopment</category>
<category>#earlychildhood</category>
<category>#quality</category>
<category>#coaching.</category>
<category>#onlinelearning,</category>
<category>#educators</category>
<category>#coaching</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 19:33:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How can child care providers support emotional regulation in young children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-support-emotional-regulation-in-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains practical ways child care providers can support emotional regulation in young children—using quick in-the-moment strategies (calming breaths, heavy work, replacement actions), short playful practice (games, brain breaks, routines), a shared language like Zones of Regulation, and a taught, supervised calm-down space with simple tools. It also stresses tracking patterns, partnering with families, referring to mental-health consultants or early intervention when behaviors are frequent or risky, avoiding common mistakes (e.g., teaching only during meltdowns or using the calm corner as punishment), and using evidence-based resources and lesson plans like those from ChildCareEd.
]]></description>
<category>#selfregulation</category>
<category>#emotions.</category>
<category>#co-regulation.</category>
<category>#calmcorner</category>
<category>#emotions,</category>
<category>#selfregulation,</category>
<category>#preschoolers,</category>
<category>#calmcorner,</category>
<category>#coaching.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 19:29:40 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How Can Child Care Providers Recognize Signs of Developmental Delays?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-providers-recognize-signs-of-developmental-delays.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide tells child care providers to routinely monitor development across five domains (language, cognitive, motor, social-emotional, self-help), record specific dated observations and checklist results, and communicate strengths-first, factual concerns privately with families. Act early—use CDC/ChildCareEd tools, suggest screening or early intervention when red flags, loss of skills, or multiple concerns appear, offer help making referrals, and follow state requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#development.</category>
<category>#milestones</category>
<category>#earlyintervention</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#documentation</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 19:29:19 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can I Build Professional Relationships With Families?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-build-professional-relationships-with-families.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Strong professional relationships with families help children feel safe and supported and improve child outcomes, and they are built through simple, consistent routines such as personalized greetings, brief orientations, daily notes or photos, and asking family communication preferences. Use strength-based, factual language for tough conversations, involve families in learning and decision-making, train your team to follow program routines, and make small, steady "trust deposits" that prevent problems from growing.
]]></description>
<category>#communication</category>
<category>#engagement</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#trust</category>
<category>#children’s</category>
<category>#trust.Use</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 19:27:35 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can we support children during changes in routine?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-we-support-children-during-changes-in-routine.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide gives clear, practical steps for child care staff to support children through routine changes—prepare with short warnings, visual schedules and previews, teach simple signals, offer choices, and use short routines (cleanup songs, single jobs, calm movement) plus calm corners and regulation tools.  
It also urges partnering with families, brief staff practice and weekly debriefs, avoiding common mistakes (vague instructions, sudden changes, punishing calm spaces), and seeking extra help when meltdowns or sleep/eating/toileting problems persist.
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#routines</category>
<category>#transitions</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#providers.</category>
<category>#3.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 19:26:13 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can Michigan infant and toddler caregivers meet their specialized training requirements online?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-michigan-infant-and-toddler-caregivers-meet-their-specialized-training-requirements-online-1.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Michigan infant and toddler caregivers can meet specialized training requirements using approved online and hybrid courses — such as the 45‑Hour Infant and Toddler Curriculum, Methods & Materials (hybrid), 120‑Hour CDA Infant/Toddler program and required safety classes — with options for bundled lead‑caregiver pathways and MiRegistry reporting.  
Plan by adding staff MiRegistry IDs to training accounts, saving certificates, making a weekly study schedule, mixing self‑paced and live sessions, scheduling in‑person CPR/First Aid/medication administration when required, and verifying course acceptance to avoid common mistakes.
]]></description>
<category>#Michigan</category>
<category>#infants</category>
<category>#toddlers.</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#MiRegistry</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:35:38 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can North Dakota childcare providers finish their annual training hours with online CEU courses?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-north-dakota-childcare-providers-finish-their-annual-training-hours-with-online-ceu-courses.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
North Dakota childcare providers can complete their annual licensing and Growing Futures Registry training requirements using approved online CEU courses from ChildCareEd — choose role-based bundles, add your Growing Futures Registry ID for weekly uploads, save certificates, and plan hours across the year. Be sure to follow state rules for required preservice trainings and hands-on CPR skill checks, avoid repeating courses within restricted timeframes, and contact your local CCR&R for help.
]]></description>
<category>#NorthDakota</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#CDA,</category>
<category>#providers</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:34:13 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How Does ChildCareEd Map Courses to North Dakota’s Core Competency Areas?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-does-childcareed-map-courses-to-north-dakota-s-core-competency-areas.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how ChildCareEd maps its courses and bundles to North Dakota’s Core Competency Areas, how to verify ND approval, and how completed course hours upload to the Growing Futures/Registry when staff add their Registry IDs. It also gives recommended course examples by competency, practical planning steps, common pitfalls (like missing Registry IDs or hands‑on CPR requirements), and tips to schedule training across the year to meet licensing and career pathway requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#NorthDakota,</category>
<category>#competency,</category>
<category>#registry,</category>
<category>#professionaldevelopment.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:34:09 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How does ChildCareEd cover North Dakota&#039;&#039;s mandated reporter training and required topics?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-does-childcareed-cover-north-dakota-s-mandated-reporter-training-and-required-topics.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd provides online courses that cover most of North Dakota’s required annual topics—teaching mandated reporting (signs, documentation, how to report), issuing certificates (often requiring a passing score), and supporting registry uploads—while noting that certain preservice items (for example, the state-specific Mandated Reporter and SIDS/Safe Sleep courses) must be completed through North Dakota–approved systems.  
To stay compliant, programs should plan training early, follow state timing and annual-hour rules, keep per-staff training files and certificates (paper and digital), add Growing Futures IDs for uploads, and confirm approvals with the state licensing agency before relying on non-state providers.
]]></description>
<category>#MandatedReporter</category>
<category>#NorthDakota,</category>
<category>#ChildSafety,</category>
<category>#Training,</category>
<category>#Preservice</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:33:54 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can I earn a CDA in Michigan and use ChildCareEd to complete my coursework hours?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-earn-a-cda-in-michigan-and-use-childcareed-to-complete-my-coursework-hours.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
To earn a Child Development Associate (CDA) in Michigan follow the Council for Professional Recognition steps: choose a CDA setting, complete 120 clock hours across the eight CDA subject areas, accrue 480 supervised work hours, assemble a professional portfolio, apply to the Council, pass the Pearson VUE exam, and complete the Verification Visit.  
MIRegistry-approved ChildCareEd supports this process with self‑paced 120‑hour programs and modular courses, automatic MiRegistry reporting when you add your ID, portfolio and exam prep, and practical scheduling, funding, and mistake‑avoidance tips to help busy providers complete requirements efficiently.
]]></description>
<category>#MiRegistry</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#Michigan</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:33:37 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can New York childcare workers in the Bronx find Spanish-language CEU courses?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-new-york-childcare-workers-in-the-bronx-find-spanish-language-ceu-courses.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide shows Bronx childcare workers where to find Spanish-language CEU courses—ChildCareEd, local community colleges/CUNY, Red Cross, NYC Parent University and Bronx community listings—how to confirm CEU/clock-hour credit with licensors and keep proof, and ways to get low-cost or free training (NY EIP scholarships, employer reimbursement, free ChildCareEd options).  
It also gives practical tips to use Spanish training to better serve Latino families (Spanish handouts, routine language use, dual-language strategies), plus common pitfalls to avoid (confirm CEU eligibility and course language, save certificates).
]]></description>
<category>#Bronx.</category>
<category>#Spanish</category>
<category>#Latino</category>
<category>#families.</category>
<category>#Spanish,</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:33:23 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How do I add my ND Registry ID to my ChildCareEd account so my training hours upload automatically?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-add-my-nd-registry-id-to-my-childcareed-account-so-my-training-hours-upload-automatically.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Add your ND Early Childhood Workforce Registry ID to your ChildCareEd profile so completed course hours upload automatically to the state, saving time and keeping training records centralized for licensing, reporting, and career tracking. To do this, sign into ChildCareEd, enter your Registry ID in your Account/Profile settings, save, then allow at least 5 business days (often included in weekly uploads) to see hours appear in the Registry—keep certificates until the upload shows and follow the director checklist to avoid common mistakes.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#Registry</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#hours</category>
<category>#26927)—see</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:33:08 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can a child care helper grow into a teacher in Nevada?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-a-child-care-helper-grow-into-a-teacher-in-nevada.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short, practical guide explains how Nevada child care directors and providers can coach a helper into a teacher by outlining required steps—education (HS/GED), credentials like the CDA, required experience hours, background checks, CPR/First Aid, preservice and annual trainings—and using the Nevada Registry and approved courses to track progress. It gives concrete actions for directors (mentoring, record-keeping, checklists, enrolling in preservice bundles), funding sources (T.E.A.C.H., free cohorts), tips for completing the CDA and portfolio, common pitfalls to avoid, and a quick-action list to start staff advancement immediately.
]]></description>
<category>#teachers</category>
<category>#Nevada?</category>
<category>#CDA,</category>
<category>#registry</category>
<category>#Nevada</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:09:52 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How do I start my journey to become an early childhood teacher in Georgia?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-start-my-journey-to-become-an-early-childhood-teacher-in-georgia.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
To start an early childhood teaching career in Georgia, complete high school/GED, choose a training path (CDA, associate, or bachelor’s), pass background checks and health requirements, finish the Georgia 10‑Hour Health & Safety Orientation within 90 days, maintain CPR/Pediatric First Aid, and log all state‑approved trainings and certificates in GaPDS since DECAL also requires at least 10 clock hours of approved training each year. To earn a CDA you must complete 120 hours of approved training, 480 hours of verified experience, build a portfolio and pass the Pearson VUE exam, and you can apply for DECAL Scholars/POWER‑ED and local grants to help cover costs while avoiding common pitfalls like missing paperwork or taking non‑approved courses.
]]></description>
<category>#Georgia</category>
<category>#teachers</category>
<category>#CDA,</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#DECAL</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:09:31 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can I become a teacher in Washington and build confidence in my early childhood classroom?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-become-a-teacher-in-washington-and-build-confidence-in-my-early-childhood-classroom.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide outlines steps to become an early childhood teacher in Washington—choose an education path (CDA, state certificate, AAS/BAS), complete required trainings, tests and background checks, document supervised hours, follow MERIT/STARS and DCYF guidance, and pursue mentorship or college pathways for advancement.  
It also gives practical classroom strategies to build confidence: use short routines and visuals, zone the room, use a 3‑step calm response to behavior, start small and celebrate wins, communicate briefly with families, hold quick staff huddles, track issues with simple data, and pick Washington‑approved trainings for credits.
]]></description>
<category>#Washington</category>
<category>#classroom</category>
<category>#children.</category>
<category>#confidence.</category>
<category>#confidence</category>
<category>#teacher</category>
<category>#Washington.</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:09:06 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How do I become a teacher in Florida and turn my love for children into a career?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-teacher-in-florida-and-turn-my-love-for-children-into-a-career.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how to become a teacher in Florida by meeting basic requirements (age, diploma, classroom hours), completing state introductory training (45‑hour or Part I/II), passing background checks and CPR/First Aid, earning credentials like the national CDA or state FCCPC/ECPC, and keeping training records for licensing and renewals. It also outlines ways to afford training (T.E.A.C.H. scholarships, low‑cost online courses, employer support), and offers director strategies—training calendars, group course bundles, progress tracking—and tips to avoid common mistakes while building a steady professional development plan.
]]></description>
<category>#Florida</category>
<category>#CDA)</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:09:00 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How Do I Become a Teacher in Texas and Help Young Children Learn, Grow, and Thrive?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-a-teacher-in-texas-and-help-young-children-learn-grow-and-thrive.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide outlines clear steps to become an early childhood teacher in Texas—finish high school/GED, complete Texas pre-service and annual training hours (log hours in TECPDS when required), pass background checks and fingerprinting, obtain CPR/First Aid, gain hands-on classroom experience, and consider earning a CDA or college degree to advance.  
Keep organized staff records, use trusted providers like ChildCareEd and local colleges for approved courses and scholarships (e.g., T.E.A.C.H.), follow HHSC licensing rules and state-specific requirements, and plan ongoing professional development to stay compliant and grow your career.
]]></description>
<category>#Texas?</category>
<category>#children.</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#CDA.</category>
<category>#teacher</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#CDA,</category>
<category>#CDA)</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:08:59 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How Do I Get Started Becoming an Early Childhood Teacher in Oklahoma?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-get-started-becoming-an-early-childhood-teacher-in-oklahoma.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide gives clear step-by-step pathways to become an early childhood teacher in Oklahoma—choose a certification route (university recommendation with a bachelor’s, an alternative/experience-based pathway, or the Head Start four-year-old certificate), open an SSO/OECS file, pass required subject and APK tests (Praxis/CEOE), complete fingerprinting and background checks, submit your application and fees, and complete state-approved OPDL/CDA training.  
It also explains how to work while you study (assistant/paraprofessional or part‑time/online coursework), where to find approved trainings and scholarships (e.g., ChildCareEd, Oklahoma Scholars), the dual oversight of teacher certification and OKDHS child care licensing, and common pitfalls to avoid—use only approved courses, start background checks early, and keep organized records.
]]></description>
<category>#Oklahoma.</category>
<category>#teacher</category>
<category>#earlychildhood</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#OPDL</category>
<category>#Oklahoma</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:08:40 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How do I become an early childhood teacher in DC?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-i-become-an-early-childhood-teacher-in-dc.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide outlines the steps to become an early childhood teacher in Washington, D.C., covering basic eligibility (18+, high school diploma/GED), required preservice health and safety trainings, choosing OSSE‑approved providers, saving certificates, and following center or family child care licensing timelines and paperwork. It also explains pursuing a CDA (120 training hours, 480 work hours, portfolio and exam), common pitfalls to avoid, useful local resources (ChildCareEd, OSSE, CCR&R), and practical next steps like taking a 1‑hour course, creating a training tracker, and asking your director about supports.
]]></description>
<category>#DC,</category>
<category>#CDA,</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#teachers,</category>
<category>#children.</category>
<category>#DC</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#CDA)</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:08:17 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can early educators in California start strong and become teachers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-early-educators-in-california-start-strong-and-become-teachers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short ChildCareEd guide helps California early educators and directors start and grow teaching careers by outlining a simple 6-step plan—choose a role, enroll in approved courses, begin Live Scan/TB/background checks, track supervised hours, keep certificates organized, and connect with local supports—plus a clear overview of Child Development permit levels and required checks.  
It also points to affordable training and funding (CECO, community colleges, county R&R, scholarships), provides director actions to build career ladders and improve retention, highlights common pitfalls, and offers quick FAQs and checklists to streamline progress.
]]></description>
<category>#California</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#earlyeducators</category>
<category>#permits</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 12:07:49 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can I manage a child care program so it runs smoothly and safely?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-manage-a-child-care-program-so-it-runs-smoothly-and-safely.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Running a smooth, safe child care program means organizing people, time, space, money, and policies into simple daily systems—clear routines, a top-three priority list, brief safety checks, and straightforward records help staff focus on children and prevent problems. Hire and retain staff with clear job paths, microtraining, mentoring and low-cost perks, and maintain safety and licensing with written policies, regular drills, documented trainings, and strong family communication, using ChildCareEd resources and your state licensing guidance as needed.
]]></description>
<category>#management</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#families.</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:28:29 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can I run strong child care administration that keeps kids safe and staff supported?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-run-strong-child-care-administration-that-keeps-kids-safe-and-staff-supported.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This concise guide helps child care directors build practical systems for safety, licensing, staffing, family partnerships, and budgeting, offering simple checklists, drills, record-keeping tips, hiring and training steps, retention ideas, and links to resources like ChildCareEd. It emphasizes easy weekly habits—prioritizing tasks, keeping ratios and schedules, tracking attendance/training/payroll, communicating with families—and advises starting with one system while checking state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#director</category>
<category>#administration,</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#budget.</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:27:38 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can ECE professional development help educators and children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-ece-professional-development-help-educators-and-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Meaningful early childhood professional development—ongoing, job‑embedded, and tied to classroom goals—helps teachers gain knowledge, improve adult–child interactions, boost child outcomes, and increase staff confidence and retention; effective formats include self‑paced online courses paired with team reflection, coaching/mentoring, microcredentials, peer learning (PLCs), and workshops with follow‑up.  
Directors should set clear program goals, make a yearly PD plan, track progress and certificates, budget paid time or stipends, require brief evidence of practice change, and avoid one‑off or irrelevant trainings so PD leads to real classroom improvement and meets state requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#professionaldevelopment,</category>
<category>#earlychildhood,</category>
<category>#educators,</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#professionaldevelopment</category>
<category>#earlychildhood</category>
<category>#educators</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:27:23 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can online professional development help my childcare program?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-online-professional-development-help-my-childcare-program.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide helps child care leaders choose, use, and track online professional development—explaining types of online learning (self-paced, live, microcredentials), who offers courses, how to match courses to program goals and state CEU/licensing rules, and practical considerations like cost, language support, and group admin tools. It emphasizes turning online learning into better daily care through small, practical changes, coaching, observation, and reflection so teachers apply new strategies with children (improving interactions and outcomes), and includes a director checklist and common pitfalls to avoid.
]]></description>
<category>#professionaldevelopment</category>
<category>#online</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:27:22 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can I create a nurturing infant environment in my childcare program?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-create-a-nurturing-infant-environment-in-my-childcare-program.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide gives practical steps for creating a nurturing infant environment—designing a physically safe, welcoming room (safe furniture, clear zones, daily checks, safe-sleep practices, labeled storage), following licensing rules, and using simple layout and training tools to build family trust.  
It stresses secure attachment and emotional safety through responsive, consistent caregiving (primary-caregiver systems, reading baby cues, routines and rituals), short supervised sensory play, common mistakes to avoid, quick action steps, and links to ChildCareEd and public-health resources.
]]></description>
<category>#infants</category>
<category>#nurturing</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#attachment</category>
<category>#sensory</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:23:45 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can grants and vouchers in Florida help child care providers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-grants-and-vouchers-in-florida-help-child-care-providers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Grants and vouchers in Florida provide funding and subsidies that help child care programs stabilize enrollment, retain and train staff, pay for facility repairs, equipment, food, and other allowable costs, and make care more affordable for low‑income families. Providers can find opportunities through ChildCareEd, local Early Learning Coalitions, Grants.gov/GrantWatch, foundations and federal programs (USDA, HUD), and should follow eligibility rules, keep required documents, track budgets and deadlines, and meet reporting requirements when applying.
]]></description>
<category>#Florida.</category>
<category>#funding</category>
<category>#providers.</category>
<category>#grants</category>
<category>#vouchers—your</category>
<category>#providers</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 19:57:51 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can grants and vouchers in New York help child care providers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-grants-and-vouchers-in-new-york-help-child-care-providers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Grants and vouchers in New York — including state subsidy vouchers (CCAP/CCDF), capital and start‑up grants, workforce scholarships like EIP, and local/private awards — can help child care providers pay for renovations, open new seats, stabilize cash flow, and fund staff training to improve program quality. Providers should monitor OCFS, ChildCareEd, local CCR&Rs and city portals (e.g., ACS eligibility wizard and GrantWatch), prepare licensing, budgets and floor plans in advance, use partners for application help, and avoid common pitfalls like missed deadlines or weak sustainability plans.
]]></description>
<category>#grants</category>
<category>#vouchers</category>
<category>#NewYork</category>
<category>#providers</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 19:18:18 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can grants and vouchers in Michigan help child care providers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-grants-and-vouchers-in-michigan-help-child-care-providers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Michigan child care providers can access a range of funding—including CDC family vouchers, Child Care Stabilization Grants, CACFP food reimbursements, federal CCDBG/CCDF funds, local/private grants, and wage/stipend programs—to pay for staff wages and bonuses, repairs, supplies, food, training, and to keep slots open for families.  
To apply, check eligibility on state and resource sites (ChildCareEd, MDE, MDHHS, Grants.gov), gather licensing and budget documents, follow each grant''s rules and reporting, keep thorough records to avoid common mistakes, and contact local resource centers for help while verifying your state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#Michigan</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 19:06:03 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can New York childcare providers serving homeless families find trauma-informed online training?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-new-york-childcare-providers-serving-homeless-families-find-trauma-informed-online-training.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article helps New York childcare providers serving homeless families find and evaluate trauma-informed online training—highlighting practical, low-cost options like ChildCareEd’s Trauma-Sensitive Care, university programs (Cornell TCI, Georgetown), and HHS resources—while reminding programs to verify CEUs and state licensing requirements.  
It advises choosing courses with clear goals, hands-on tools (scripts, checklists, videos), practice and certification options, and pairing training with short refreshers, staff wellness supports, calm-corners, and local partner connections so learning sticks and families receive consistent, trauma-informed care.
]]></description>
<category>#homelessness</category>
<category>#NewYork</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#child.</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:47:52 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can New York childcare workers serving children with disabilities find specialized online CEU courses?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-new-york-childcare-workers-serving-children-with-disabilities-find-specialized-online-ceu-courses.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
New York childcare directors and staff can find specialized online CEU courses for serving children with disabilities by prioritizing state‑accepted providers like ChildCareEd, using trusted public resources (CDC, MSDE), checking course pages for OCFS/CDA approval, CEU/clock hours, completion rules and certificate format, and adding Aspire or state registry IDs so hours upload automatically.  
To choose and use courses effectively, match offerings to licensing or CDA goals and classroom needs, seek scholarships, bundles or free modules to lower cost, save dated certificates in a shared tracking system, and reinforce online learning with team practice and follow‑up coaching to improve inclusion and compliance.
]]></description>
<category>#inclusion,</category>
<category>#NewYork</category>
<category>#disabilities</category>
<category>#childcare</category>
<category>#CEUs.</category>
<category>#inclusion</category>
<category>#CEUs</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:46:50 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can New York Childcare Workers Earn Their CDA Online While Working Full Time?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-new-york-childcare-workers-earn-their-cda-online-while-working-full-time.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
New York childcare workers can earn their CDA while working full-time by enrolling in approved self-paced 120-hour online courses, using micro-learning and weekly goals (2–4 hours), building the portfolio incrementally, and leveraging employer supports like paid study time and mentoring; the New York Educational Incentive Program (EIP) can often pay training and assessment fees.  
Follow the guide’s practical steps—choose courses with portfolio review, apply for EIP, collect artifacts weekly, practice for the Verification Visit, and confirm state-specific licensing requirements before enrolling.
]]></description>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#portfolio</category>
<category>#NewYork</category>
<category>#online</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:37:59 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Where can New York childcare providers find online infant safe sleep training that meets OCFS requirements?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/where-can-new-york-childcare-providers-find-online-infant-safe-sleep-training-that-meets-ocfs-requirements.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
New York childcare providers can find OCFS‑approved online infant safe sleep courses through trusted hubs like ChildCareEd’s New York listings and should verify OCFS/Aspire approval on course pages or with their licensing rep before enrolling. Plan and track training by adding staff Aspire Registry IDs so credits upload, saving certificates, scheduling hours to meet biennial requirements, avoiding non‑approved courses and unsafe items, and communicating clear written safe‑sleep policies and alternatives with families.
]]></description>
<category>#safe</category>
<category>#sleep</category>
<category>#infant</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#practice</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:37:47 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can New York childcare workers finish online trauma-informed care training to better serve vulnerable children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-new-york-childcare-workers-finish-online-trauma-informed-care-training-to-better-serve-vulnerable-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide shows New York childcare staff how to find and complete state-approved online trauma-informed care courses (look for clock hours and certificates, e.g., ChildCareEd), prepare your tech, pass required quizzes, save certificates/transcripts, and log course details to meet OCFS licensing rules. It also gives practical steps to apply learning—create brief action plans, practice skills with staff and families, track outcomes, avoid common pitfalls, and escalate to mental-health consultants or advanced trainings (like TCI) when needed.
]]></description>
<category>#trauma</category>
<category>#children.</category>
<category>#NewYork</category>
<category>#childcare</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#children</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:37:44 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How is online childcare training helping New York educators deliver better early childhood education?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-is-online-childcare-training-helping-new-york-educators-deliver-better-early-childhood-education.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Online childcare training gives New York programs flexible, OCFS‑approved, and cost‑effective options that make compliance and staff-wide, consistent learning easier by providing printable certificates, short modules to fit busy schedules, and scalable group administration. When paired with practical steps—clear training plans, short monthly courses, follow-up coaching/observations, and a mix of free and paid resources—this approach improves classroom routines, language and social‑emotional supports, health-and-safety practices, and staff confidence, producing measurable gains for children.
]]></description>
<category>#online</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#NewYork</category>
<category>#educators</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:37:21 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can North Dakota Childcare Workers Complete the CDA Online?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-north-dakota-childcare-workers-complete-the-cda-online.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Yes — North Dakota childcare workers can complete the CDA coursework online while working if the courses meet the 120-hour CDA subject-area requirement, noting they must still document 480 hours of experience and complete a portfolio, verification visit, and the Pearson VUE exam. Directors should choose approved 120-hour courses with portfolio support, register staff in the ND Growing Futures registry, use state scholarships/reimbursements and ChildCareEd resources, keep centralized training records, set weekly study goals (e.g., 3–5 hours/week), and confirm state licensing specifics before proceeding.
]]></description>
<category>#NorthDakota</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#childcare</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:36:56 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can New York childcare providers finish OCFS training hours quickly and affordably online?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-new-york-childcare-providers-finish-ocfs-training-hours-quickly-and-affordably-online.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
New York childcare providers can complete their required 30 OCFS training hours quickly and affordably by planning which topic hours they still need, mixing short (1–3 hour) online courses with a longer 30‑hour bundle, setting weekly targets, and using OCFS‑approved distance learning from trusted providers like ChildCareEd. To save money and ensure hours count, look for bundles and low‑cost courses, apply for EIP scholarships and local CCR&R support, download and keep certificates (or have the provider upload to Aspire with your ID), and verify OCFS approval before enrolling.
]]></description>
<category>#NewYork</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#OCFS</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 12:36:21 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Texas early educators build a child care career from the start with ChildCareEd?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-texas-early-educators-build-a-child-care-career-from-the-start-with-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how Texas early educators can build a child care career using ChildCareEd and TECPDS by choosing a clear goal, completing required pre-service and annual trainings (e.g., 24-hour pre-service), uploading certificates, matching courses to the ages you teach, and planning required instructor-led hours while taking advantage of free courses and funding. Directors are encouraged to support staff with simple career plans, schedule flexibility, paid training time, scholarship help, and TECPDS tracking to stay compliant and reduce turnover — and everyone should verify their state licensing rules.
]]></description>
<category>#Texas</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#career</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#TECPDS</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:59:02 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Georgia early childhood educators start their career path with ChildCareEd’s support?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-georgia-early-childhood-educators-start-their-career-path-with-childcareed-s-support.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd helps Georgia early childhood educators start and grow by outlining immediate requirements (background checks, GaPDS ID, 10‑Hour Health & Safety), organizing records, and offering DECAL‑approved trainings, online 120‑hour CDA courses, and career bundles with GaPDS upload support. Financial aid like DECAL Scholars, tips to avoid common mistakes, and clear pathways to lead teacher, director, or FCCLH roles make training manageable while improving program quality and child outcomes.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#career.</category>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#Georgia</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#career</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:58:42 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can Washington child care professionals begin their career with confidence through ChildCareEd?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-washington-child-care-professionals-begin-their-career-with-confidence-through-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd offers flexible, Washington-approved online courses (including free starters), a Washington course catalog, and tools like Group Admin plus clear STARS/MERIT guidance so child care providers and directors can quickly earn certificates that meet licensing and training requirements. It also provides onboarding checklists, time- and cost-saving strategies, and record-keeping best practices to help teams build confidence, track renewals, and maintain compliance.]]></description>
<category>#CDA</category>
<category>#ChildCareEd</category>
<category>#Washington</category>
<category>#MERIT</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:58:40 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why should DC early childhood educators start their career journey with ChildCareEd?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/why-should-dc-early-childhood-educators-start-their-career-journey-with-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd provides DC-focused, OSSE‑Trainer‑Approved flexible and affordable training — preservice bundles, self‑paced courses, CDA pathways, and free short modules — designed to meet DC licensing and CDA requirements while simplifying staff training and record-keeping. The guide gives practical steps (pick role‑appropriate courses, save certificates, use bundles, create training calendars, add brief team follow-ups), warns common pitfalls, and emphasizes verifying course approval with OSSE or your state licensing agency.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#DC</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:58:18 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can Nevada Child Care Providers Turn a Passion for Children into a Career with ChildCareEd?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-nevada-child-care-providers-turn-a-passion-for-children-into-a-career-with-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide shows how Nevada child care providers can turn a passion for working with children into a career by following licensing steps (background checks, inspections, application), completing required preservice and annual trainings (CPR, First Aid, abuse recognition, age-specific hours), joining the Nevada Registry, and using ChildCareEd-approved courses and checklists. It also explains setting up safe home or center programs, avoiding common compliance mistakes, and finding funding and scholarships (grants, TEACH, CDA) to advance credentials and pay.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#Nevada</category>
<category>#licensing</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#career.</category>
<category>#career</category>
<category>#Nevada.</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:58:12 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can California early educators start strong and grow their careers with ChildCareEd?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-california-early-educators-start-strong-and-grow-their-careers-with-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide explains how California early educators and directors can start and advance careers using ChildCareEd by choosing a role, completing targeted courses, meeting permit requirements (fingerprinting, TB, supervised hours), and keeping organized records and certificates.  
It also outlines affordable training and scholarship sources (CECO, county R&R, CDTC), practical director strategies—mentoring, career ladders, group training—and simple metrics to track progress so programs retain staff and meet licensing rules.
]]></description>
<category>#California</category>
<category>#EarlyEducators</category>
<category>#ChildCareEd</category>
<category>#Permits</category>
<category>#Training</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:58:08 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can Oklahoma Early Educators Take the First Step Toward a Child Care Career with ChildCareEd?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-oklahoma-early-educators-take-the-first-step-toward-a-child-care-career-with-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The article gives Oklahoma early educators a step‑by‑step path to start a child care career: read state licensing rules, choose your role, complete required pre‑service health & safety and OPDL Level 1 training, and use ChildCareEd’s state‑aligned, self‑paced bundles (which can auto‑upload certificates to the Oklahoma Professional Development Registry when staff add their OPDR IDs).  
It also explains advancing to higher OPDL levels and a CDA (required training hours, supervised experience, portfolio and exam), offers director tips for buying bundles, tracking records, and avoiding non‑approved courses, and recommends the immediate action of enrolling one staff member in a 4–12 hour course, adding their OPDR ID, and confirming the certificate posts.
]]></description>
<category>#Oklahoma</category>
<category>#earlychildhood</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:57:55 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can teachers make back-to-school easier for everyone?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-teachers-make-back-to-school-easier-for-everyone.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide gives short, practical steps for preparing classrooms, teaching routines and calm transitions, organizing materials and staff scripts, and arranging spaces so children feel safe, teachers can teach, and the day runs smoothly. It also recommends brief family communication, gradual supports for anxious or struggling children, consistent behavior expectations and safety plans, and using one small change at a time while consulting local licensing and linked resources for more detail.
]]></description>
<category>#classroom,</category>
<category>#routines,</category>
<category>#teachers,</category>
<category>#children,</category>
<category>#transitions.</category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 00:05:09 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Minnesota grants and vouchers help child care providers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-minnesota-grants-and-vouchers-help-child-care-providers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Minnesota grants and vouchers—such as Child Care Economic Development Grants, Community Solutions, private and national foundations, workforce and federal programs, and CCAP vouchers—provide funding to expand or support child care centers, pay staff, buy supplies, and improve facilities, with opportunities listed on sites like ChildCareEd and state agencies. The article gives step-by-step guidance on where to look, how to apply, required documents, allowable uses, and best practices for tracking expenses, reporting, and avoiding compliance issues so providers can use funds sustainably.
]]></description>
<category>#Minnesota</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#childcare</category>
<category>#Minnesota.</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 19:29:14 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can grants and vouchers in Pennsylvania help child care providers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-grants-and-vouchers-in-pennsylvania-help-child-care-providers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how Pennsylvania child care providers can use grants and vouchers—federal subsidies (like Child Care Works), state and local grants, competitive federal awards, and private foundation funds—to pay for staff, training, renovations, supplies, and to expand slots, and points to where to find them (ELRCs, OCDEL, ChildCareEd, grants.gov, foundations and local pilots). It also gives practical application steps (required documents, budgets, deadlines), common mistakes to avoid, recordkeeping and eligibility tips, and recommends using regional ELRCs and ChildCareEd for coaching and approved trainings to ensure funds are used correctly.
]]></description>
<category>#Pennsylvania</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#grants,</category>
<category>#vouchers,</category>
<category>#grants</category>
<category>#vouchers</category>
<category>#funding</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 19:19:09 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can grants and vouchers in Oklahoma help child care providers?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-grants-and-vouchers-in-oklahoma-help-child-care-providers.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Grants and vouchers in Oklahoma—from OKDHS subsidy and ARPA/stabilization grants to scholarships, tribal funds, and private foundations—can help child care providers cover wages, supplies, training, rent, and other allowed expenses to keep programs open and improve quality. To access them, confirm licensing/Stars status, monitor OKDHS/ChildCareEd/CCR&R listings, assemble required documents, track spending and reporting carefully, and communicate with families to avoid misusing funds or missing deadlines.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#grants</category>
<category>#vouchers</category>
<category>#Oklahoma</category>
<category>#subsidy</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 18:35:49 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>ChildCareEd is a TEA-Approved CPE Provider</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd is now a Texas Education Agency (TEA)–approved Continuing Professional Education (CPE) provider (provider #910060), authorized to offer CPE courses that Texas educators can use toward renewing their standard certificates through the ECOS system. Educators should confirm eligibility and required clock hours (commonly 150 for classroom teachers and 200 for many administrators or multiple certificates), ensure courses align with their certificate area, keep completion documentation for five years, and verify specifics on the TEA/ECOS renewal pages.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 17:50:39 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>🌙 Celebrate the Islamic New Year with Savings! 🌙 Take $10 OFF a 4-hour online course</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/coupon-10OFF4HR-celebrate-the-islamic-new-year-with-savings-take-10-off-a-4-hour-online-course.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[Start the new year strong by investing in your growth and professional development.

This special offer is the perfect opportunity to refresh your skills, meet training requirements, or explore new topics.

✅ Self-paced
✅ Online access 24/7

🕒 Offer valid through June 30, 2026

👉 Start Learning Now at ChildCareEd.com

Don''t wait— this deal won’t last!]]></description>
<category>coupons</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 17:33:28 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="info@childcareed.com">info@childcareed.com</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can learning environments support children&#039;&#039;s development?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-learning-environments-support-children-s-development.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Supportive learning environments combine clear routines, defined centers with reachable materials, warm adult–child interactions, and opportunities for outdoor, sensory, and inclusive play to promote children’s social, emotional, language, motor, and cognitive development. Small, practical steps—like labeling shelves, predictable schedules, positive guidance, low-cost adaptations for inclusion, staff training, and family partnerships—make spaces safer, more engaging, and help children thrive.
]]></description>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#learning</category>
<category>#playbased</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 16:58:40 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How do we build developmentally appropriate programs for young children?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-do-we-build-developmentally-appropriate-programs-for-young-children.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
A short guide to building developmentally appropriate programs emphasizes observing children and using play-based, age-appropriate, individually and culturally responsive activities, predictable routines, intentional room design, and 1–2 small weekly goals with simple assessments (photos/notes) shared with families. It also highlights inclusion and positive guidance, practical transition strategies, staff training and coaching, and the use of trusted resources (NAEYC, RAND, ChildCareEd) while reminding programs to follow state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#children&#039;&#039;s</category>
<category>#DAP</category>
<category>#play</category>
<category>#inclusion,</category>
<category>#assessment</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#inclusion</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 16:57:55 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>What safety rules should childcare programs follow to keep children safe?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/what-safety-rules-should-childcare-programs-follow-to-keep-children-safe.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This short guide summarizes childcare safety essentials: follow national and state standards, keep short written policies, maintain proper staff-to-child ratios and background checks, train staff in CPR, first aid, medication, safe sleep and infection control, and use active supervision, checklists, and documentation to prevent problems. Create simple numbered emergency plans, practice and log drills, keep an accessible emergency kit and accurate medication records (Five Rights), clean/disinfect per CDC guidance, plan reunification with families, and use ChildCareEd templates and your state licensing agency for tools and compliance.
]]></description>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#health</category>
<category>#emergency</category>
<category>#supervision</category>
<category>#policies.</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 16:57:30 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 and report child abuse?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-child-care-programs-prevent-and-report-child-abuse.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Child care programs prevent abuse by using written safety policies, careful hiring and screening, appropriate supervision and ratios, regular training (including mandated reporter and trauma‑informed care), family supports, and clear documentation, using resources like the CDC and ChildCareEd. If abuse is suspected, staff should stay calm, listen without leading, document factual details (date, time, words), report immediately to local child protective services or law enforcement per state rules, protect confidentiality, follow workplace reporting flows, and connect the child and family to trauma‑informed supports.
]]></description>
<category>#mandatedreporter.</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#safety.</category>
<category>#trauma-informed</category>
<category>#prevention.</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 16:57:24 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Michigan childcare programs raise their Great Start to Quality rating with online training?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-michigan-childcare-programs-raise-their-great-start-to-quality-rating-with-online-training.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Michigan childcare programs can raise their Great Start to Quality rating by using Michigan‑approved ChildCareEd online courses to address the five rating areas—staff qualifications, family partnerships, administration, environment & safety, and curriculum—while documenting learning with dated certificates, photos, lesson plans, and updated policies.  
Follow a simple plan: do a gap check, pick three high‑impact fixes, assign and track courses (upload to MiRegistry), collect practice evidence in classroom folders, meet monthly, and use local Great Start Resource Centers and grants for extra support.
]]></description>
<category>#GreatStartToQuality</category>
<category>#quality</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#MiRegistry</category>
<category>#MiRegistry.</category>
<category>#MiRegistry,</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:40:45 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How can I complete my Minnesota childcare training hours online through the Develop Registry?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-complete-my-minnesota-childcare-training-hours-online-through-the-develop-registry.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how to complete Minnesota childcare training online by creating ChildCareEd accounts, adding each staff member’s Develop Registry ID so completions post automatically, enrolling in Develop-approved courses or bundles, and downloading certificates as backups while ChildCareEd typically posts completions weekly.  
Directors should use Group Admin tools to enroll teams, buy bundles to save money, verify postings in the Develop Registry and follow the provided troubleshooting steps if hours don’t appear, and always confirm state licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#ChildCareEd,</category>
<category>#Develop,</category>
<category>#Minnesota,</category>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#Develop</category>
<category>#ChildCareEd</category>
<category>#Minnesota</category>
<category>#training</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:40:40 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Michigan infant and toddler caregivers meet their specialized training requirements online?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-michigan-infant-and-toddler-caregivers-meet-their-specialized-training-requirements-online.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Michigan infant and toddler caregivers can complete required specialized training online—commonly via a 45-hour Infant and Toddler Curriculum or a 120-hour CDA program plus safety modules (Safe Sleep, SIDS, CPR/First Aid)—by choosing MiRegistry‑approved courses, adding their MiRegistry ID for automatic reporting when supported, and saving certificates as proof.  
Plan a study schedule, confirm course format and state acceptance to avoid common mistakes, and remember this training improves safety, routines, family partnerships, regulatory compliance, and career advancement.
]]></description>
<category>#infants</category>
<category>#toddlers</category>
<category>#Michigan</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#certification</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:40:36 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>Can Minnesota Childcare Directors Complete Their 40-Hour Requirement Entirely Online?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-minnesota-childcare-directors-complete-their-40-hour-requirement-entirely-online.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Yes — Minnesota child care directors can complete the full 40-hour director/administrator requirement entirely online if they use Develop-approved providers (for example ChildCareEd), choose courses covering required topics (child growth/development, health & safety, SUID/AHT, CPR/First Aid, administration and age-specific content), add their Develop Registry ID before starting, and ensure the provider reports hours. Directors should download and retain certificates, verify completions on the Develop Registry, follow Minnesota statute 245A.40 for topic and renewal rules, and avoid common mistakes like using unapproved providers, failing to add their Develop ID, or waiting until the last minute.
]]></description>
<category>#Minnesota</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:40:28 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can North Dakota Family Childcare Providers Meet Health and Safety Training Requirements Online?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-north-dakota-family-childcare-providers-meet-health-and-safety-training-requirements-online.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
North Dakota family child care providers can meet health and safety training requirements using approved online sponsors (for example ChildCareEd), add their Growing Futures/Registry ID for automatic credit uploads, and complete approved online courses for preservice, safe sleep, health & safety orientation, and annual bundles. For CPR/First Aid, a hands-on skills check is required via blended or in-person formats, so plan and track training across the year, keep certificates until the registry shows credit, and schedule skills sessions to avoid last-minute noncompliance.
]]></description>
<category>#NorthDakota</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#safety</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#health</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:40:14 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How can Michigan childcare providers use MiRegistry and ChildCareEd to track and finish training hours online?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-michigan-childcare-providers-use-miregistry-and-childcareed-to-track-and-finish-training-hours-online.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide explains how Michigan child care programs can meet preservice and annual training requirements by creating MiRegistry accounts, collecting staff MiRegistry IDs, linking those IDs in ChildCareEd so completions post automatically (usually within ~5 business days), enrolling staff in MiRegistry-approved ChildCareEd courses, and verifying uploads and certificates for licensing.  
It also provides role-specific course mappings (lead caregivers, directors, preservice health & safety), tips to avoid common mistakes (collect IDs at hire, choose approved courses, spread training across the year), and record-keeping advice to support licensing and Great Start to Quality reviews.
]]></description>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#MiRegistry</category>
<category>#ChildCareEd</category>
<category>#Michigan</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:40:11 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
</item>
<item>
<title>How Can Minnesota Family Childcare Providers Find Affordable CCAP-Approved Online Training Courses?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-minnesota-family-childcare-providers-find-affordable-ccap-approved-online-training-courses.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide shows Minnesota family child care providers how to find affordable CCAP- and state-approved online trainings by using resources like ChildCareEd’s Minnesota guide and catalog, county or tribal CCAP offices, and local CCR&R programs. To make hours count, verify Minnesota/Develop approval on course pages, add each provider’s Develop Registry ID to vendor accounts before starting so hours post automatically, combine free courses, short low-cost classes or state bundles, pursue CDA reimbursement or grants, and save certificates and course details for audits.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:40:02 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Can Online Childcare Training Help My Minnesota Program Move Up a Parent Aware Star?</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-online-childcare-training-help-my-minnesota-program-move-up-a-parent-aware-star.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Online, Minnesota‑approved childcare training (health & safety, family engagement, child development, leadership and ongoing PD) can help programs earn higher Parent Aware stars by improving staff skills, documentation, and family partnerships, which increases family trust and access to funding. The guide explains which trainings to prioritize, how to organize certificates, reflections and evidence (use staff folders, training calendars and Develop Registry reporting), common mistakes to avoid, and recommends starting with one staff member and one key course while checking state licensing rules.
]]></description>
<category>#ParentAware</category>
<category>#Minnesota.</category>
<category>#quality</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#quality,</category>
<category>#families.</category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 13:39:59 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Don’t Miss Out: Save $85 with Expiring Coupons in Just 30 Days!</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/don-t-miss-out-save-85-with-expiring-coupons-in-just-30-days.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
For the next 30 days educators and caregivers can save a total of $85 with expiring coupons: $50 off a 45‑hour online/self‑paced child care course (multiple curriculum options that meet MSDE requirements), $15 off an in‑person Pediatric First Aid & CPR/AED course with hands‑on practice and a 2‑year certification, and $20 off Don’t Leave Learning Behind. Act quickly to claim these discounts to advance professional skills, obtain required certifications, and improve child care practice.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 07:01:29 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>CACFP Certification Training for CCNP and CMP Applicants</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/cacfp-certification-training-for-ccnp-and-cmp-applicants.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd offers online courses that can help CCNP and CMP applicants document continuing education hours when course topics align with the National CACFP Association’s CEU specialty areas, but ChildCareEd does not issue certifications and final acceptance is determined by the National CACFP Association—applicants must keep certificates, convert CEUs to clock hours, and submit documentation directly to the Association.  
ChildCareEd certificates use decimal CEUs (0.1 = 1 hour) which applicants should convert on the CACFP CEU worksheet and assign to specialties (Nutrition; CACFP Program Operations; Training & Technology; Program Administration; Financial Management; Management; Civil Rights & Policy); certifications are valid 3 years and require specified specialty-hour distributions for CCNP (Specialties 1–3 with a minimum in Nutrition) and CMP (Specialties 1–7).
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 19:54:27 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo los directores de daycare pueden gestionar la capacitación del personal en línea</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puede-la-formaci-n-en-l-nea-y-el-portal-admin-de-childcareed-facilitar-el-trabajo-de-un-a-director-a.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía explica cómo los directores de centros infantiles pueden usar el Portal Admin de ChildCareEd para planificar, asignar, seguir y documentar la formación del personal en línea, ahorrando tiempo y dinero mediante compras al por mayor, descarga de certificados y soporte centralizado.  
Recomienda microformación y un plan 30-60-90 con módulos cortos, seguimiento y copias de seguridad de certificados, coaching respetuoso para aumentar el compromiso y verificar siempre los requisitos estatales antes de programar horas obligatorias.
]]></description>
<category>#capacitación)</category>
<category>#capacitación</category>
<category>#directores</category>
<category>#personal</category>
<category>#cumplimiento</category>
<category>#ChildCareEd.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:31:12 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How Daycare Directors Can Manage Staff Training Online</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-online-staff-training-and-the-childcareed-admin-portal-make-a-director-s-job-easier.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The ChildCareEd Admin Portal centralizes online staff training—allowing directors to assign courses quickly, buy hours in bulk, track progress and download certificates—so centers can simplify compliance, documentation, and multi-site management while checking state licensing rules. The guide also recommends practical strategies for busy programs—microlearning, a 30–60–90 plan, simple tracking/backups, peer coaching and monthly PD bites—to boost staff buy-in and avoid common pitfalls like lost certificates or nonapproved courses.
]]></description>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:31:12 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Seguimiento del cumplimiento en cuidado infantil: registros, certificados y progreso del personal</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedo-usar-childcareed-group-admin-para-rastrear-registros-de-capacitaci-n-certificados-y-el-progreso-del-personal-para-cumplir-con-la-normativa.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd Group Admin es un panel para directores y gerentes que centraliza la compra de horas, la asignación y el seguimiento de cursos, la descarga de certificados y la gestión del cumplimiento estatal, reduciendo hojas de cálculo y certificados perdidos. El artículo aporta pasos prácticos (archivo por empleado, copia digital, calendario de renovaciones y revisiones a 120/90/60/30 días), consejos para evitar errores comunes (entradas duplicadas, fechas incorrectas, cursos no aprobados) y orientación sobre cómo subir registros estatales y solicitar soporte.
]]></description>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#records</category>
<category>#certificates</category>
<category>#compliance.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:30:40 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Child Care Compliance Tracking: Training Records, Certificates, and Staff Progress</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-use-childcareed-group-admin-to-track-training-records-certificates-and-staff-progress-for-compliance.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The ChildCareEd Group Admin is a centralized dashboard that helps directors and program managers buy bulk training hours, assign courses, track staff progress, download certificates, and (where supported) upload completions to state registries to simplify compliance and avoid lapses. The article also gives practical recordkeeping steps—one staff file, one program binder, one digital backup—plus monitoring and renewal tips (120/90/60/30-day reviews), common pitfalls to avoid (duplicate entries, wrong dates, non‑approved courses), and a short startup checklist to keep licensing visits smooth.
]]></description>
<category>#training,</category>
<category>#records,</category>
<category>#certificates</category>
<category>#compliance.</category>
<category>#staff</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:30:40 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo ayudar a su personal de daycare a completar la capacitación a tiempo</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedo-ayudar-a-mi-personal-de-guarder-a-a-completar-la-formaci-n-a-tiempo-con-group-admin-de-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Group Admin de ChildCareEd facilita a los directores de guarderías la gestión de la formación del personal al centralizar la asignación de cursos, el seguimiento del progreso, la descarga de certificados y la reasignación de plazas, lo que ahorra tiempo y ayuda a mantener la compliance. Incluye un plan práctico de 6 pasos (reunir IDs, elegir cursos, asignar con fecha límite, reservar tiempo, revisar progreso, guardar certificados), además de pautas para evitar errores comunes y estrategias de motivación como mentoría e incentivos para asegurar que la formación se complete a tiempo y mejore la calidad del cuidado.
]]></description>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#compliance,</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#GroupAdmin.</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:27:46 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How to Help Your Daycare Staff Complete Training on Time</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-help-my-daycare-staff-finish-training-on-time-with-childcareed-group-admin.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Group Admin centralizes daycare training by letting directors add staff, assign and track courses, bulk-purchase seats, reassign unused hours, and download certificates to simplify compliance and licensing checks. Follow the six-step plan—collect IDs, choose courses, assign with deadlines, block short work time, monitor progress weekly, and save certificates—while verifying state approvals and using mentoring/incentives to keep staff motivated and finish training on time.
]]></description>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#compliance,</category>
<category>#children</category>
<category>#GroupAdmin</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
<category>#GroupAdmin.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:27:46 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Gestión de registros de capacitación en cuidado infantil sin papeleo</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/puede-el-group-admin-de-childcareed-ayudarme-a-gestionar-registros-de-capacitaci-n-sin-papel.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Group Admin de ChildCareEd permite a directores y administradores sustituir el papeleo por un panel único para comprar horas al por mayor, asignar cursos rápida y masivamente, seguir finalizaciones en tiempo real, imprimir certificados al instante y reasignar horas, reduciendo errores y ahorrando tiempo en auditorías.  
Configurar es sencillo (crear cuenta, comprar horas, añadir personal, asignar cursos y exportar informes) y requiere prácticas clave como verificar la aceptación estatal de cursos, recopilar IDs de registro, programar recordatorios de renovación, mantener copias de seguridad y compartir acceso con un coadministrador para garantizar cumplimiento y fiabilidad.
]]></description>
<category>#directors</category>
<category>#records</category>
<category>#GroupAdmin</category>
<category>#compliance.</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Managing Child Care Training Records Without the Paperwork</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/can-the-childcareed-group-admin-help-me-manage-training-records-without-paperwork.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The ChildCareEd Group Admin is a single dashboard that replaces paper training records—allowing directors to bulk-purchase hours, assign courses, track completions, print certificates on demand, reassign hours when possible, and (in many states) upload completions to registries—saving time, reducing errors, and keeping programs audit-ready.  
Setting up is straightforward (create an admin account, buy hours, add staff and registry IDs, assign courses, track completions, and back up reports) and requires avoiding common pitfalls (state acceptance of courses, duplicate entries, privacy rules, missing IDs, and missed renewals) and preparing a digital licensing binder and quick reports for inspections.
]]></description>
<category>#directors</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#records</category>
<category>#GroupAdmin</category>
<category>#compliance.</category>
<category>#records,</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Cómo llevar el seguimiento de la capacitación del personal de cuidado infantil en un solo lugar</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedo-rastrear-la-capacitaci-n-del-personal-de-cuidado-infantil-en-un-solo-lugar-con-childcareed-group-admin.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El Admin Portal de ChildCareEd centraliza en un solo lugar la gestión de la capacitación del personal de cuidado infantil: crear cuenta, comprar horas o suscripción, agregar al equipo, asignar cursos, monitorear progreso y descargar certificados para facilitar el cumplimiento y las auditorías.  
El artículo ofrece pasos rápidos para empezar, advierte sobre errores comunes, propone una rutina de 15 minutos semanales y destaca ventajas como ahorro por compras al por mayor, reasignación de horas, planes de desarrollo profesional y herramientas para gestión de equipo e instrucción.
]]></description>
<category>#formación</category>
<category>#certificados</category>
<category>#personal.</category>
<category>#personal</category>
<category>#AdminPortal</category>
<category>#cumplimiento</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:26:51 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>How to Track Child Care Staff Training in One Place</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-track-child-care-staff-training-in-one-place-with-childcareed-group-admin.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
ChildCareEd’s Admin Portal centralizes staff training so directors can buy hours, add team members, assign courses, monitor progress, download certificates, reassign unused hours, and manage compliance from one dashboard. The article gives setup steps, key features (bulk hours, team management, PD plans), a 15-minute weekly routine, and common mistakes/tips (verify IDs/emails, save certificates, set internal deadlines) to keep programs licensing-ready.
]]></description>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#certificates</category>
<category>#staff.</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#AdminPortal</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:26:51 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Capacitación en línea del personal para centros de cuidado infantil: guía para directores</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-directores-de-guarder-as-gestionar-la-formaci-n-del-personal-en-l-nea-con-la-funci-n-group-admin-admin-portal-de-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía explica a directores de centros de cuidado infantil cómo usar Group Admin (Admin Portal) de ChildCareEd para gestionar la formación en línea del personal —incluyendo configuración, compra y asignación de horas/cursos, seguimiento del progreso y descarga de certificados para auditorías— y recuerda verificar los requisitos de licencia estatales.  
Ofrece pasos prácticos, consejos para ahorrar dinero, errores comunes y acciones inmediatas (añadir personal e IDs, comprar un paquete y asignar un curso), además de recursos de soporte y la recomendación de mantener registros digitales y físicos.
]]></description>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#directors.</category>
<category>#horas,</category>
<category>#directors</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
<category>#AdminPortal</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:25:31 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Online Staff Training for Child Care Centers: A Director’s Guide</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-daycare-directors-manage-staff-training-online-with-childcareed-s-group-admin-admin-portal.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide shows child care directors how to use ChildCareEd’s Admin Portal (formerly Group Admin) to manage staff training—setting up accounts, buying and assigning courses, tracking progress, storing printable digital certificates, and ensuring compliance with state registries. It also offers practical tips to streamline recordkeeping, avoid common mistakes, save money with bulk subscriptions and reassignable hours, and recommends keeping a master tracker plus digital backups for licensing audits.
]]></description>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#directors</category>
<category>#hours,</category>
<category>#compliance</category>
<category>#AdminPortal</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 18:25:31 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Meet Your NAC Renewal Requirement with ChildCareEd</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/meet-your-nac-renewal-requirement-with-childcareed.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The National Administrator Credential (NAC) is a NECPA-issued professional credential for child care directors and administrators that requires a 45-hour initial course, is valid for two years, and must be renewed by completing 24 clock hours of professional development focused on administration, leadership, staff supervision, laws, and program operations.  
ChildCareEd offers flexible, self-paced online courses—such as Early Childhood Program Administration (32 hrs), Child Care Administration (30 hrs), and Childcare Management (10 hrs)—that align with NAC renewal topics; save your certificates, confirm course acceptance with NECPA, and submit your documentation when renewing.
]]></description>
<category>#NACRenewal</category>
<category>#ChildCareTraining</category>
<category>#ProfessionalDevelopment</category>
<category>#ChildCareDirector</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 16:39:02 GMT</pubDate>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Meet Your NAC Renewal Requirement with ChildCareEd</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com</link>
<description><![CDATA[
The National Administrator Credential (NAC) is a 45-hour credential for child care directors awarded by NECPA, valid for two years and requiring 24 clock hours of relevant professional development to renew.  
ChildCareEd offers flexible, self-paced online administration and management courses (e.g., Early Childhood Program Administration, Child Care Administration, Childcare Management) to help meet the 24-hour requirement, but save your course certificates and confirm NECPA acceptance and submission steps before renewing.
]]></description>
<category>#NACRenewal</category>
<category>#ChildCareTraining</category>
<category>#ProfessionalDevelopment</category>
<category>#ChildCareDirector</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 16:39:02 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Childcare Management Strategies for Daycare Owners</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-daycare-owners-manage-their-centers-better-and-keep-staff-safety-and-families-happy.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This guide provides practical, actionable strategies for daycare owners to streamline daily operations, hire and retain staff, meet health/safety and licensing requirements, and strengthen family partnerships using short routines, checklists, simple metrics, and training resources.  
It emphasizes small, repeatable habits—daily top‑3 priorities, quick staff check‑ins, microlearning, mentoring, written policies and drills, and low‑cost perks—while recommending templates, QRIS and state licensing resources to measure progress and ensure compliance.
]]></description>
<category>#daycare,</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#leadership,</category>
<category>#policies.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 14:57:48 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Estrategias de gestión del cuidado infantil para dueños de daycare</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-due-os-de-guarder-as-gestionar-mejor-sus-centros-y-mantener-felices-al-personal-la-seguridad-y-las-familias.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El artículo ofrece pasos prácticos para dueños de daycare que incluyen crear sistemas diarios (prioridades matutinas, rutinas cortas, listas y métricas), mejorar contratación y retención de personal (rutas de carrera, microformación, mentoría y beneficios de bajo costo) y garantizar salud y seguridad (políticas claras, formaciones, simulacros y registros).  
Además recomienda fortalecer la comunicación con las familias mediante historias de aprendizaje y eventos breves, medir la calidad con indicadores simples y aprovechar recursos gratuitos como ChildCareEd y las guías estatales, destacando que cambios pequeños y rutinarios construyen estabilidad y mejoras sostenibles.
]]></description>
<category>#daycare,</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
<category>#policies.</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 14:57:48 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Gestión del cuidado infantil: personal, horarios, registros y familias</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-directores-gestionar-bien-al-personal-los-horarios-los-registros-y-las-familias.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
El texto ofrece pasos prácticos para dirigir un programa de cuidado infantil: contratar y retener buen personal mediante descripciones claras, formación y mentoría; crear horarios predecibles y visuales con rutinas y señales de transición; y organizar registros en un sistema de tres lugares con seguridad y plantillas. Además recomienda construir alianzas con las familias mediante comunicación breve y regular, establecer límites y cumplir requisitos estatales para reducir el estrés, mejorar el aprendizaje y proteger el programa.
]]></description>
<category>#schedules</category>
<category>#records</category>
<category>#families.</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 14:57:25 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Childcare Management: Staff, Schedules, Records, and Families</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-directors-manage-staff-schedules-records-and-families-well.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This article gives simple, practical steps for running a childcare program: hire and retain staff with clear job packets, prompt orientation and mentoring, personnel records, and short daily check-ins; create steady visual schedules anchored to 4–5 daily routines with transition cues; and organize paperwork using a secure three-place system (child folder, classroom binder, program file) with clear documentation.  
It also recommends clear family communication—one-page handbooks, daily touchpoints, weekly visuals, and quarterly meetings—and emphasizes that these small, steady practices reduce stress, support children’s learning, improve staff retention, and help meet licensing requirements.
]]></description>
<category>#schedules,</category>
<category>#records,</category>
<category>#families.</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#schedules</category>
<category>#records</category>
<category>#families</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 14:57:25 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<title>Consejos de gestión del cuidado infantil para dirigir un programa exitoso</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-puedo-dirigir-un-programa-de-cuidado-infantil-exitoso.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
Esta guía ofrece consejos prácticos y simples para dirigir un programa de cuidado infantil, abarcando liderazgo y apoyo al personal, seguridad y salud, manejo financiero y archivos, y estrategias para involucrar a las familias y la comunidad. Incluye hábitos diarios, listas de verificación para inspecciones, recursos de formación (como ChildCareEd), recomendaciones tecnológicas y errores comunes a evitar, recordando verificar los requisitos estatales y tomar acciones pequeñas y constantes para mejorar la calidad y estabilidad del programa.
]]></description>
<category>#staff?</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#budget,</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 14:57:18 GMT</pubDate>
<source url="https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php">https://www.childcareed.com/feed.php</source>
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<title>Childcare Management Tips for Running a Successful Program</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/how-can-i-run-a-successful-childcare-program.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
This concise guide gives practical tips for childcare directors and providers on leadership, staff support, health and safety, financial and record management, and family/community engagement to run a calm, safe, and sustainable program. It recommends simple habits (daily huddles, mentoring, focused training, checklists, budgeting, backups, and clear communication), using resources like ChildCareEd, CCR&Rs and CACFP, and checking state licensing rules to stay compliant and grow enrollment.
]]></description>
<category>#staff?</category>
<category>#staff</category>
<category>#families</category>
<category>#staff,</category>
<category>#safety,</category>
<category>#budget,</category>
<category>#families,</category>
<category>#leadership</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 14:57:18 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>North Carolina DCDEE Works: guía para proveedores</title>
<link>https://www.childcareed.com/a/c-mo-pueden-los-proveedores-usar-dcdee-works-de-carolina-del-norte-para-gestionar-las-calificaciones-del-personal.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[
DCDEE WORKS es el portal estatal de Carolina del Norte para gestionar los expedientes de formación y calificaciones del personal de cuidado infantil, permitiendo crear cuentas, asociar personal con la instalación, subir certificados aceptados y solicitar puestos como Lead Teacher o Administrator.  
La guía explica qué documentos subir frente a cuáles enviar por correo (p. ej. transcripciones oficiales), recomienda un sistema simple de archivos y recordatorios para evitar errores comunes (RCP caducado, cursos no aprobados) y remite al especialista de licencias del condado, CCR&R y las guías de ChildCareEd para apoyo.
]]></description>
<category>#NorthCarolina,</category>
<category>#providers</category>
<category>#WORKS</category>
<category>#DCDEE</category>
<category>#training</category>
<category>#NorthCarolina</category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 14:56:08 GMT</pubDate>
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