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10 Options for After-School Child Care

Figure out what child care option works best for your family's needs.

10 Options for After-School Child Care

Parents of school-age children manage a unique balancing act during the school year. Early dismissal days, snow days, teacher work days and other days off excite kids, but leave parents struggling to meet their children’s care needs.

The hours between 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. each day are even more challenging for parents, as they try to fill the gap between the end of the school day and the end of their work day. A patchwork combination of care works for some parents, while others prefer to stick with a single care solution.

For insights into the best strategies for after-school care, we asked two experts for advice: Patricia Dischler, the president of the National Association for Family Child Care, and Susan Stiffelman a parenting expert and author of “Parenting Without Power Struggles.”

“There is no ‘one size fits all’ child care program,” says Dischler. “Children are unique and so are the programs. It’s up to the parents to find the best match for their child.”

Here are 10 suggestions to help your family fill the after-school hours with affordable care:

1) Enroll in a School-based Program

In some schools, teachers provide after-school child care. Children are in a safe environment and will know the adults involved in providing care. Privately run programs sometimes operate their own after-school program at a school site. A big plus: In either of these situations, your child will be in a familiar environment.

2) Establish a Flexible Work Schedule

A flexible work schedule can help with after-school care. An arrangement like this might involve one parent dropping off in the mornings while the other gets to work early. Then, by the time the kids are out, the early working parent is home after a putting in a full day at the office.

See if your employer is open to this arrangement and read about the 10 Things to Ask HR for Today.

3) Work From Home

Working from home is often an ideal solution for parents whose companies offer this opportunity. Caring for children while working from home doesn’t work as well with younger children as with tweens and teens. Some companies even have policies that those who work from home may not care for children. Check with your HR department before considering this.

Check out the 10 Tips to Make Working from Home — Work

4) Hire an After-School Nanny

Search Care.com to find an after-school nanny who can pick your children up from school or the bus stop, bring them home, make yummy snacks, help with homework, plan activities, etc. Many will also perform some light housekeeping if you ask.

Follow these 7 Tips for Hiring After-School Child Care

5) Get a Babysitter

If your kids are a little older and you just need someone to simply watch them until you get home, a babysitter may be a good option. They’re usually not as trained as focused on child development as a nanny, but can be a better fit for your family.

A neighborhood teen may be your family’s solution, especially if the teen already serves as your date-night babysitter. Your child has already built a rapport with the sitter and teens are often great homework helpers, too. As with all care providers, a teen caring for your child should hold infant and child CPR certification.

Find out the 10 Safety Tips for Hiring a Teen Babysitter

>Learn how to be a Fair Care Employer
>Take the Fair Care Pledge

6) Find Family Child Care

According to Dischler, a family child care center can be a great after-school answer. They’re run in providers homes, so kids benefit from a small, family-like environment, while you know they’re taken care of until you get home.

Learn more about Family Child Care

7) Rely on Family

Grandparents and other relatives are a favorite after-school care solution. Some grandparents are able to care for the children daily, while others can help out a few days a week. If you’re lucky, you can cobble together child care with a combination of other relatives, friends or hired caregivers pitching in the rest of the week. Relatives are often familiar with the children’s daily routine and generally flexible about transporting children to activities.

8) Head to the YMCA

In some areas, the YMCA offers after-school care on the school premises. In other locations, after-school care is provided at the actual YMCA, with bus runs from schools to the centers and some programs offer full-day care on vacation days. Your child may also participate in sports programs during their time there. The Boys & Girls Clubs of America offer comparable options. No chapters near you? Investigate what other community-based organizations might offer a similar service.

9) Sign up for Enrichment Programs

An after-school enrichment program may offer your family just the right solution. They may include tutoring in one or more subjects, participating in an arts or crafts program, learning at a museum-based program or another enrichment program. You may find these programs locally at children’s museums, zoos, recreation centers or tutoring centers.

10) Arrange a Child Care Co-op

Child care cooperatives can be formed by a group of friends who are all parents, by neighbors in a community or by businesses helping their employees by providing professional co-op child care. In most neighborhood child care co-ops, no money changes hands. Parents simply ask for care when they need it and care for other members’ children in return. Establish ground rules to avoid misunderstandings if you are creating a new co-op.

While filling the after-school time gap may seem daunting, there are many options for care. Consider your child’s personality, interests and needs when weighing all available options.

“A child who thrives in family child care, due to the small group size, may feel overwhelmed in a larger community based program,” says Dischler. “Another child may thrive in a program that is sports-based, and another child may thrive best when cared for by a relative.”

Stiffelman and Dischler both agree that providing your children with a place where they are nurtured and provided time to do homework, unwind and play will make life less stressful. Plus, you won’t feel guilty because you can’t be there when school ends. The transition from school, to after-school care, to home will be smoother when everyone is comfortable.
 

Sandy Wallace is a freelance writer in Lynchburg, Va. You can find her work here.