A new study that looked at more than 75,000 children in
day care in Norway found little evidence that the amount of time a child
spends in child care leads to an increase in behavioral problems,
according to researchers from the United States and Norway.
Several prior studies in the U.S. made connections between the time a
child spends in day care and behavioral problems, but the results from
Norway contradict those earlier findings, the researchers report in the
online version of the journal Child Development.
"In Norway, we do not find that children who spend a significant
amount of time in child care have more behavior problems than other
children," Boston College Associate Professor of Education Eric Dearing,
a co-author of the report, said. "This runs counter to several US
studies that have shown a correlation between time in child care and
behavior problems."
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