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.
-
California requires every school district to offer the preschool program to all 4-year-olds. But uptake has been uneven.
-
Stanford economists estimate it would cost the state up to $21 billion to offer universal child care for kids 3 and under in California.
-
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.
Support trustworthy childhood education coverage
Some teachers are making the switch from private preschools to transitional kindergarten. Others come from upper grades. Many are needed.
Listen
3:50
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
Liz Chrastil, a neuroscientist at UC Irvine, opted to have her brain scanned every few weeks during her entire pregnancy to see what changes occur. It’s the closest look yet and researchers call the data astounding.Listen 18:48
-
Currently, workers cannot apply for benefits until their first day of leave, and can go weeks without pay.
-
Only two state university programs train nurse-midwives, and only one is accepting admissions. Advocates say that will only lead to more barriers to getting more midwives into the workforce at a time they’re critically needed.
-
As California expands transitional kindergarten to all 4-year-olds, children are starting public school at a younger age. But districts have varying policies on how to help kids who are not yet potty-trained.
-
At least four maternity wards shut down last year alone, including Centinela Hospital Medical Center in Inglewood.
-
First 5 California surveyed more than 1,000 parents and business owners about childcare affordability.
-
A bill to give California teachers up to 14 weeks of paid pregnancy leave failed to pass the state legislature this week.
-
It’s a hard world out there to raise kids. Trying to get the care and support you need can feel complicated or just plain unfair. Here’s what you can do as a parent to make things better.
-
Currently, workers get way less of their income when they take time off to care for a baby or a sick family member.
-
A law that went into effect last year is meant to bring clarity to what many say has been too broad of a definition.
-
The overall number of 4-year-olds in transitional kindergarten has increased. But as the program is being phased in, the percentage of eligible children enrolling has dropped.
-
Private centers and state-funded preschools in L.A. County have reported nearly 28,000 empty slots.