Day care is to take care of a child within a day from a month to another age. This may be because parents are busy and can not look after them at the same time, whether due to work, school, or other time-consuming obligation. Therefore, Day Care provides alternative care for children when parents leave. Many people believe that children should not be taken care of by strangers who are widely criticized.
In Denmark, daycare accepts children from 6 months to 3 years old. 91.2% of children aged 1-2 years are enrolled in various types of daycare facilities. Most of them are managed by the municipal government and most of them are funded by the government. Different types of facilities include independent daycare facilities (Vuggestue), kindergartens and daycare departments (Integrerede facilities), and family day care (Dagpleje). In Germany, preschool education is usually divided into kindergartens (under 3 years old) and children aged 3 and older in the field of Kindertagesstätte (literally meaning "child's day" and often abbreviated as Kita or KITA) Yes. Preschool children. Kindergarten children are classified as Vorschule ("preschool") and may be given special educational attention; the special infant educational institution equivalent to American kindergarten is an exception
In Germany, kindergartens (male kindergartens, multiple kindergartens) are facilities for taking care of pre-school children who are usually 3 or older. In contrast, Kinderkrippe or Krippe refers to a nursery school that takes care of children before entering kindergarten (about 9 years to about 3 years). Attendance for the original child facility is optional, and it is not normally free. Preschoolers aged 1 and older have the right to receive affordable day care locally. In the federal system, kindergartens are the responsibility of the state, the state usually delegates most of its responsibility to local governments. § 4 There are many operators from municipalities, churches and welfare associations to parent initiatives and profit-making companies for the support principles set forth in SGB VIII.