Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
-
Listen Listen
Early Childhood Education
Families, regardless of income, will get 400 diapers when they are discharged from the hospital.
-
The U.S. Senate has until Friday night to approve a package of funding measures or else risk another government shutdown.
-
The Governor’s proposal uses cannabis tax revenues to support child care infrastructure affected by the January 2025 fires.
-
Last year, homelessness declined overall in the region, but not for families with children. And service providers say even that was an undercount.
-
Transitional kindergarten is forcing a change in the way elementary schools operate in California.
-
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will now recommend vaccines against only 11 diseases.
-
The Child Care and Development Fund sends money to states to help make child care more affordable for low-income families.
-
The law also mandates coverage to include same-sex couples and single parents.
-
As family housing resources shrink in L.A., one family has left what they know in California behind to start a life in the Midwest, where housing costs are vastly lower.
-
Some teachers are making the switch from private preschools to transitional kindergarten. Others come from upper grades. Many are needed.
-
Nearly a year after the fires, childcare providers say they need more help from the state to rebuild.
Support trustworthy childhood education coverage
California Botanic Garden opens Children’s Woodland, a free-form nature play space that emphasizes connections to native plants.
Listen
0:43
Listen
3:57
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
Under a new law that goes into effect Jan. 1, 2024, workers and their partners can get up to five days of leave for a miscarriage, stillbirth, failed adoption, and other types of reproductive loss.
-
Federal pandemic relief funds for childcare programs expired Sept. 30, leaving providers around the country worried about shutting their doors. In California, the state’s put in some stopgap measures.
-
Elly Yu, our investigations reporter, joins the education team.
-
We take this question to the best experts in SoCal on this topic — parents — who give their tips for facing the unknown during pregnancy.
-
With rising housing costs, pushback from landlords and homeowners associations, and a complex web of regulations, it’s a wonder home-based providers exist at all.
-
Parenthood means big transitions — huge changes for your body, your perspective, and your identity. Your questions, answered.
-
The Los Angeles Unified School District has expanded transitional kindergarten two years ahead of a state mandate to open the program to every 4-year-old.
-
The exposure to lead is particularly dangerous to children under the age of 6, which makes the numbers particularly concerning.
-
We can’t make child care cheaper, but we can help prepare you with the information to find resources and support.Listen 5:27
-
The administration is turning to semiconductors in the hopes of expanding affordable child care.
-
You asked us questions about baby development. Occupational therapist Dairian Roberts joined LAist’s text service Hey bb to give some answers.
-
Stephanie Moran Reed had to say goodbye in January to the bookstore she founded with her husband. The MiJa Books owner opens up on customer experiences, mom guilt, and a favorite book recommendation.