Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
Education
Gov. Gavin Newsom has proposed record levels of public funding for K-12 schools, but several Southern California school districts may need to make cuts next school year.
Listen
0:41
Read more in-depth coverage
-
We can’t tell you which schools to apply to, but we can help you think about how to choose a school.
-
Pregnancy is a wild journey, with so many questions to answer. We're here to help.
-
You can succeed at college once you figure out all the little things no one tells you about.
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
Assembly Bill 873, authored by Assemblymember Marc Berman, D-Menlo Park, would direct the state’s Instructional Quality Commission to incorporate media literacy into K-12 curriculum in English language arts, math, science, history and social studies frameworks.
-
The district and unions representing teachers and support staff agreed to retain a three-week winter break, and add additional instructional days.
-
Dorsey High has a history of musically talented alumni. But deep cuts to arts funding meant years of students went without music education.
-
The U.S. foster system has many flaws, but consistent efforts have paid dividends at Mt. San Antonio College.
-
A new analysis shows that the California State University system doesn’t make or receive enough money to cover its costs, even with state support. The report and lawmakers urge the system to increase tuition, but even that might not be enough.
-
Attorneys say that last school year the district suspended Black students at rates four times higher than their white peers and suspended students with disabilities twice as often as those without disabilities.
-
To watch the sixth grade performance of "The Sound of Music," K-3 students at Rolling Hills Elementary in Fullerton must be accompanied by a parent, and those in grades four through six must have parental permission.
-
A Cambodian graduation ceremony at California State University, Long Beach became a moment to honor the ancestors and help heal the still-fresh pain of genocide.
-
UC Regents created a working group that will determine how best to open campus jobs to students without work authorization.
-
Gov. Gavin Newsom is closing and downsizing prisons across the state, putting the future of over 1,000 incarcerated students at risk. College administrators say they have few resources to help.