Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
-
Listen Listen
Early Childhood Education
The state has a program for self-employed workers and small business owners, but workers don’t always know to opt in.
-
One L.A. County child care provider is turning decades of experience into videos that resonate with caregivers across the country.
-
Sharpen your pencils and open your spreadsheets. We’re going to talk about pregnancy and work — from family leave to accommodations during pregnancy, and where you can pump when you return to work.
-
You asked us for tips on how to feel confident and prepared to raise concerns, ask questions— and more importantly, get answers — about your care during pregnancy and childbirth. We got the experts.
-
Tummy time for babies can strengthen muscles and help them learn to crawl. Here are some tips to make that more pleasant for everyone.
Support trustworthy childhood education coverage
California requires every school district to offer the preschool program to all 4-year-olds. But uptake has been uneven.
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
LA invested millions in preschools. Less than four years later, it's offloading most. What happened?Parents loved Los Angeles' licensed childcare centers. Now they're calling the program a "total failure."
-
Even as TK is set to become a real grade, just like any other K-12 grade, there are myriad challenges looming on the horizon, from finding qualified teachers amid a dire staffing shortage to how to ensure quality instruction and suitable facilities.
-
For the first time, some early education centers have waitlists. But the district still has many empty seats
-
The advocate for nonviolent parenting and educator to decades of Angelenos was 81.
-
The city recently gave early childhood educators a huge salary boost. It's part of a strategy to attract and retain people in the job.
-
Enrollment in public preschool and transitional kindergarten increased by more than 35,000 children in the 2023-2024 school year. But potential elimination of Head Start threatens those gains
-
Los Angeles expanded childcare during the pandemic, but federal funding is running out. Parents are worried about what happens next.
-
The state said the change from a 2024 law will be part of a larger overhaul of California's benefits system.
-
California needs a lot more teachers and aides to fill transitional kindergarten classrooms, but advocates say early childhood educators who have the experience and desire to step into those jobs are deterred by the state’s credentialing system.
-
California ranks fourth for most expensive child care in the country, according to a new report.
-
Almost two months after the L.A. fires, some childcare providers who lost their homes and businesses say they're not able to access the aid they've been told to apply for.
-
Two years after Medi-Cal expanded to cover doulas, some say it's a fight to get reimbursed for their services.