Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
-
Listen Listen
Early Childhood Education
In Los Angeles County alone, there are about 9,000 licensed early care and education providers. Here's how to get started with understanding your options.
-
Experts urge honesty as ICE activity continues in L.A.
-
Starting this November, the state will offer free childcare to families regardless of income.
-
The $1.3 million initiative, which will train and support families and caregivers, is funded through an 18-month grant.
-
The county joins the state in offering bailout dollars for surging liability insurance premiums.
-
Tried-and-true spots families love for play, exploration, and burning energy.
-
More than 3.6 million children born in 2020 amid the COVID-19 global pandemic are walking into elementary schools across the country this fall.
-
With family shelters currently full, L.A.'s homeless services agency is crafting messaging for providers when they have to turn families away.
-
This fall at least 200,000 California students are expected to enroll in transitional kindergarten, which serves as a bridge between preschool and kindergarten.
-
Family child care providers in the union will get $90 million in one-time payments to help stabilize the industry.
-
The survey, done every month since 2021, found that the number of child care providers struggling economically is rising.
Support trustworthy childhood education coverage
The report by the National Institute for Early Education Research found California met 3 out of 10 quality benchmarks for transitional kindergarten.
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
The state has a program for self-employed workers and small business owners, but workers don’t always know to opt in.Listen 0:49
-
Experts say play can be key in helping children through big feelings.Listen 3:57
-
In 2025, the state increased payments for people who took time off to care for a child or a family member.Listen 4:16
-
First 5 Orange County was recently awarded $75,000 from O.C. Supervisor Vicente Sarmiento.
-
Experts say California isn't studying its own transitional kindergarten program, despite research that has shown a public preschool program doesn’t guarantee better outcomes.Listen 24:19
-
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.Listen 0:46
-
The U.S. Senate has until Friday night to approve a package of funding measures or else risk another government shutdown.Listen 0:43
-
The Governor’s proposal uses cannabis tax revenues to support child care infrastructure affected by the January 2025 fires.Listen 0:38
-
Last year, homelessness declined overall in the region, but not for families with children. And service providers say even that was an undercount.Listen 0:44
-
Transitional kindergarten is forcing a change in the way elementary schools operate in California.Listen 4:00
-
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will now recommend vaccines against only 11 diseases.