

About this study
A huge number of childcare initiatives have been introduced over
the last decade to better provide for children and their families.
The government hopes they could improve children's development,
help parents in the labour market and reduce child poverty.
However, how parents use childcare will influence these effects.
So this report, published in March 2009, looks at:
You can read the findings here.
Timeline

Potential policy impact
Evidence packages of childcare used by families will inform policy developments - different childcare packages might be associated with more or less positive child development.
Methodology
This project involved secondary analysis of data from the Childcare
and Early Years Survey of
Parents. This data is based on face-to-face interviews with
over 7,000 parents of children aged 14 and under. Parents are
randomly selected to take part from Child Benefit records to make
sure that they are representative of all parents in England.
Our definition of childcare includes any time that children were
not with their resident parents (or a resident parents' current
partner). So, childcare includes informal childcare, such as
grandparents, as well as formal childcare and early years education
like nurseries and childminders. For school-age children, it also
covers time at out-of-school activities.
The first survey in this series was called the Parents Demand for
Childcare survey. This was first run in 1999 and was repeated in
2001. After that the survey was redesigned and became the Childcare
and Early Years survey. This was run in 2004 and since then it has
been run in 2007, 2008
(details) and 2009
(details).