
Title
Child care quality and children's cortisol in Basque Country and the NetherlandsAuthor (from another institution)
Other institutions
https://ror.org/027bh9e22Version
PostprintDocument type
Journal ArticleLanguage
EnglishRights
© ElsevierAccess
Open accessPublisher’s version
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appdev.2010.05.001Published at
Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 31(4), 339-347xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-publicationfirstpage
339xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-publicationlastpage
347Publisher
ElsevierKeywords
Child care quality
Salivary cortisol
Spanish Basque Country
The Netherlands ... [+]
Salivary cortisol
Spanish Basque Country
The Netherlands ... [+]
Child care quality
Salivary cortisol
Spanish Basque Country
The Netherlands
Toddlers [-]
Salivary cortisol
Spanish Basque Country
The Netherlands
Toddlers [-]
Subject (UNESCO Thesaurus)
Child careAbstract
A cross-country comparison of children's cortisol levels at child care was performed in relation to their cortisol levels at home and the quality and quantity of child care they received. Participants ... [+]
A cross-country comparison of children's cortisol levels at child care was performed in relation to their cortisol levels at home and the quality and quantity of child care they received. Participants were toddlers visiting child care centers in Spanish Basque Country (N = 60) and the Netherlands (N = 25) with substantial variation in structural child care quality (group sizes, childcaregiver ratios). Salivary cortisol was measured at mid-morning and mid-afternoon, both at child care and at home. Children's actual experiences in child care (global quality), as measured with the Early Childhood Environment Rating Scale-Revised edition (ECERS-R), did not differ significantly across the two countries. Overall, children did not produce more cortisol at child care than at home. Results suggest that factors other than structural quality and quantity of care are responsible for cortisol diurnal changes. Global quality matters in explaining cortisol diurnal change in children visiting child care centers. [-]
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- Articles - Education [174]
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