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May in Childcare Preparing for Summer Without Burning Out

May is one of the most important months in childcare.


It looks cheerful on the surface. Teacher appreciation posts. End of school celebrations. Summer countdowns.


But behind the scenes, May is planning season. Providers are reviewing enrollment. Adjusting schedules. Hiring for summer. Updating policies. Reviewing budgets. Preparing for inspections. Finalizing food program documentation. Managing parent transitions.


This is the month where strong systems protect your peace.

If May is not intentional, summer becomes overwhelming.


Here is how to prepare wisely.


1. Review Your Enrollment Strategy Before Summer Starts

Summer can create sudden shifts.


School age children enroll. Some families pause care. Schedules change. Vacation patterns increase.


Action steps:

• Confirm every family’s summer schedule in writing

• Reissue your summer policy if needed

• Review ratios for combined age groups

• Evaluate whether you need temporary staff


Do not assume. Confirm. Clarity now prevents confusion in June.


2. Audit Your Tuition Structure


Many providers undercharge for summer because they feel pressure to be flexible.


Review:

• Are you charging holding fees correctly

• Are vacation policies clearly applied

• Are drop in rates structured properly

• Is summer programming priced to reflect added workload


If your summer requires more planning and activity, your pricing should reflect that.


Sustainability is not selfish.


3. Prepare for Licensing and Quality Visits

Spring and summer are common inspection windows.


Use May to:


• Update emergency binders

• Confirm training hours

• Review medication logs

• Clean and label storage areas

• Update classroom postings


Preparation reduces anxiety. You do not want summer chaos and compliance stress happening at the same time.


4. Strengthen Your Food Program Systems

Food program audits often occur during seasonal transitions.


This month:

• Reconcile attendance against meal counts

• Review portion sizes

• Confirm current income eligibility forms

• Organize receipts


Clean records protect reimbursement.

Disorganization costs money.


5. Protect Your Energy Before Summer

Burnout peaks in late summer, not because of summer, but because May was chaotic.

Ask yourself:


• What can be simplified

• What can be documented now

• What policies need tightening

• What boundaries need reinforcement


Strong systems create peaceful summers.


6. Consider a Small Summer Revenue Booster

Summer presents opportunities for structured additional income without overload.

Examples:


• Themed weekly activity kits

• Paid enrichment add ons

• Parent workshops

• Supply fee adjustments

• Structured summer program registration


Even an additional $300.00 to $500.00 per month during summer can stabilize your yearly income.


Be intentional, not reactive.


May Is Not Just About Appreciation

It is about positioning.


Childcare providers carry enormous responsibility. May is the month to strengthen your structure so that summer does not overwhelm your systems.


Planning is protection.

Stability is built in quiet preparation.

And strong preparation leads to confident summers.


Daycare Time Solutions

 
 
 

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