Percentage of families with school-age children using childcare during school holidays, 2008 to 2022
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The proportion of families with school-aged children using childcare during school holidays by year.
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Data set details
- Theme
- Early years
- Publication
- Childcare and early years survey of parents
- Release
- Reporting year 2022
- Release type
- Geographic levels
- National
- Indicators
- Proportion
- Filters
- Childcare type
- Time period
- 2008 to 2022
Data set preview
time_period | time_identifier | geographic_level | country_code | country_name | Type_of_childcare | Proportion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | Calendar year | National | E92000001 | England | Any childcare | 50 |
2008 | Calendar year | National | E92000001 | England | Formal childcare | 22 |
2008 | Calendar year | National | E92000001 | England | Informal childcare | 35 |
2008 | Calendar year | National | E92000001 | England | No childcare used | 50 |
2009 | Calendar year | National | E92000001 | England | Any childcare | 51 |
Variables in this data set
Variable name | Variable description |
---|---|
Proportion | Proportion |
Type_of_childcare | Childcare type |
Footnotes
- Caution should be taken when comparing 2021 figures with other years due to the potential impact of COVID disruptions on the 2021 data
- 2010 data corresponds to 2010-11, 2011 data corresponds to 2011-12, 2012 data corresponds to 2012-13, 2014 data corresponds to 2014-15. There was no survey in 2013, 2015 and 2016. 2019 survey was with families with children aged 0-4 and so the data are not directly comparable. 2020 data is presented separately in the supporting files due to a limited sample caused by COVID-19 disruption, limiting comparisons.
- z refers to an observation that is not applicable. This is used for 2019 data as this was completed by parents of 0-4s only.
- x is used when the data is unavailable. This is used when the data was not collected in that year.
- Estimates for the use of ‘any childcare’ and ‘informal childcare’ prior to the 2019 wave include ex-husbands/wives/partners as a form of childcare, and this should be borne in mind when making comparisons across survey years.
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