Still Not Enough Affordable After school Programs to Keep Pace with Demand
Millions of school-age kids are going home to an empty house
after school, and the number of kids home alone has actually increased over the
past five years even as after school care is more plentiful.
The After school Alliance conducted a national household survey of early 30,000 families in 2009 to learn how many children participate in after school programs, how many are unsupervised after school, and how these numbers compare to five years ago.
The After school Alliance conducted a national household survey of early 30,000 families in 2009 to learn how many children participate in after school programs, how many are unsupervised after school, and how these numbers compare to five years ago.
The America After 3PM study
sponsored by the JC Penney After school Fund essentially found that while after school programs today are serving significantly more children than in
2004, more children today are home alone after school, and that the demand for
safe, quality and affordable options is higher than ever.
Key findings
- About 26 percent
of America's school-aged children are on their own after the school day
ends until a parent returns home from work. The percentage of children
left on their own in the afternoons has increased in the past five years
from 14.3 million in 2004 to 15.1 million in 2009.
- There is a
growing awareness that children are at particular risk during the
afternoon hours from a safety and "poor choices" point of view.
In addition, kids who are home alone and remaining inside the house (which
most are directed to do) often spend the time eating junk food, watching
television, and not participating in any physically-active or academic
work during these hours. A lack of healthy eating and physical exercise is
contributing to the childhood
obesity epidemic, which is starting at an earlier age than ever
before.
- Today, 30 percent of middle
school students (3,722,219) and 4 percent of elementary school children
(1,133,989) are unsupervised after school. Increasingly, older-age
children may be responsible for caring for their younger siblings after
the end of the school day.
- The availability of after school programs has improved in the past five years. This is another example of
how child care
trends are changing across the nation. But the report
indicates that there are still not enough programs to keep pace with
rising needs. Some program directors say it is a juggling act to provide
safe and affordable after-school care with activities that are enticing to
the middle-school age with enough participants to make it cost effective.
- Fifteen percent of children
currently participate in after school programs, a 4 percent increase from
2004. Parents of 18.5 million children not currently participating in after school programs say they would enroll their children if a program
were available to stem--a significant increase from the 30 percent who
responded similarly in 2004.
- Cost, especially during today's
tough economic times, makes paying for after school child care programs
more challenging. Some parents don't put their kids in after school care
programs--even though they know it would keep their kids more
safe--because they simply can't
afford to do so. On average, parents who pay for after school programs pay $67 per week, up from an average of $44 per child
per week five years ago.
Parents
need to carefully consider the pros and cons of having a child stay home alone
after school and to know whether a
youngster is truly old and mature enough to be unsupervised after
school.
Fort Myers
child care facility and Pre School
offering
free vpk and after school programs.
"Developing
Kings and Queens one child at a time."
We’re in the business of raising generations
of happy children and nurturing their talents and dreams!
Royal Crown Academy
1650 Medical Lane
suite 1
Fort Myers FL 33907
Phone: 239-771-8045 Web: www.royalcrownacademy.com
Email:
royalcrownacademyvpk@gmail.com
Contact us today
for a tour and pricing of our After-school program.