bottom line, in case you hadn’t noticed:
“when the mother’s choice was congruent with what she wanted and believed, children did well”
via Day care in the United States: Is it good or bad for kids? – Slate Magazine.
bottom line, in case you hadn’t noticed:
“when the mother’s choice was congruent with what she wanted and believed, children did well”
via Day care in the United States: Is it good or bad for kids? – Slate Magazine.
Lots of murkiness in both the data and the interpretation. I have a hard time understanding the conclusion about congruence. Is it saying that child development was poor when the mother wanted the child to be in day care but was instead staying home with the child?
I don’t think one could reach that conclusion based on what the author shares. Fair question, though, worth answering by somebody out there with access to the data.