Latino Parent Attitudes about Child
Care/Early Childhood Education Interview Study (LPACI)
Timeline
2005-2008
Research Questions
- What are the early child care and
education (ECE) preferences and barriers experienced in accessing child
care for low-income Latino families living in Los Angeles County?
- What are the experiences of Latino parents in adapting to
the United States and becoming parents, and how do those experiences
relate to the use of different types of early child care and education
services and parental goals for the child?
Project
Staff
Nora Obregon
Project Support
First 5 LA
David & Lucile Packard Foundation
UC MEXUS
UCLA Institute of American Cultures
Project Summary
The Latino Parent Attitudes about
Child Care/ECE Interview Study, or LPACI, was conducted with a
sub-sample of
Latino families from the LA ExCELS study.
One hundred and sixteen immigrant mothers from Mexico and
Central
American countries, as well as U.S.-born Mexican American mothers, were
interviewed using an open-ended protocol designed for this study. All
the
children were of preschool age at the time mothers were interviewed.
The LPACI
interview probes parent practices and beliefs as they relate to four
interconnected parenting domains: 1) parenting expectations and ideals;
2)
early care and education beliefs and practices; 3) childhood
experiences of
both the focus child and the parent; and 4) reflections on the
experiences of
adapting to life in the United States and adapting as a parent. A
secondary
goal of the research is to better understand the cultural nuances that
may come
into play as parents who themselves were born outside the United
States, or who
were raised by family members born outside the United States, attempt
to access
ECE resources. The cultural
underpinnings of child care choices are still relatively understudied
and not well
understood in the field of child development. This study seeks to help
bring to
light both the real and perceived barriers that low-income and
immigrant Latino
families confront as they attempt to interface with the system of early
child
care and education.
The LPACI
study is somewhat different from other research conducted at CICCQ in
that the
interview protocol itself, the way the interviews were conducted, and
the
analysis all draw heavily from an ethnographic approach.
The research was designed in this manner in
order to capture the cultural nuances which are less apparent when
using
fixed-answer protocols or survey methods. LPACI study findings also
will be
combined with data collected in the LA ExCELS parent study, to fully
round out
the family, household, and educational contexts within which Latino
parents
express and enact their child care choices.