Starting this November, the state will offer free childcare to families regardless of income.
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We can’t tell you which schools to apply to, but we can help you think about how to choose a school.
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With family shelters currently full, L.A.'s homeless services agency is crafting messaging for providers when they have to turn families away.
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Critics say the cash-strapped system misspent millions of dollars getting upgraded accounts for all students. CSU leaders insist they're needed to meet a changing economy.
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Colleges are seeing significant AI success, with some estimating they now catch more than 90% of scammers.
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If you want to send your child to a magnet, dual-language, or charter school next year, here’s what you need to know.
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Cal Poly Pomona students and others objected to the Customs and Border Protection agency recruiting at the campus job fair.
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The budget gap has led to a tuition hike, along with spending cuts and fewer course offerings. At the same time, generative AI already has transformed higher ed — including post-grad job prospects.
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School board officials say it's seen more students opt into its Virtual Academy as the ongoing immigration activity continues across the region.
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The entire $6.8 billion in education funds that had been abruptly withheld from states by the administration a few weeks before the start of the school year will be released by October.
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While fears of immigration raids clouded the back-to-school season, lighthearted student traditions persist on the first day of school in Long Beach.
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For 60 years, TRIO has helped millions of people along the path to a degree, but the administration says it is no longer needed.
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Several UCLA scientists tell LAist that their experiments on cancer, heart disease and other ailments are imperiled, but they’re more worried that young academics will abandon the field and that humanity will be worse off for it.
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To continue making the teaching profession more accessible to candidates from historically excluded groups, experts provide recommendations for policymakers at the state and federal level.
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Some schools are still displaced after the Eaton Fire.
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Just blocks away from Boyle Heights schools, immigration agents staged an operation in Little Tokyo, heightening concerns among students and parents.
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