The case for revolutionizing child care in America Parents of the world, unite! OK, so Dana Suskind's call to arms doesn't have quite that revolutionary zeal. But it comes close.
The F.D.A. authorizes Pfizer-BioNTech boosters for children ages 5 to 11. More than eight million of the 28 million children in that age group in the United States have received two vaccine shots.
Two U.S. senators push a more modest proposal on child care Amid the deepening child care crisis, two Democratic senators, Patty Murray of Washington and Tim Kaine of Virginia, are joining forces to push a scaled-back version of the ambitious child care program that was part of President Joe Biden’s “Build Back Better” legislation, as HuffPost reported
How to restore California’s ailing child care system: Pay the teachers Covid-19 brought California’s already-ailing child care system to its knees. If you work in child care or are a parent, you are intimately familiar with this reality.
Governor Newsom Proposes $18.1 Billion Inflation Relief Package Package includes direct payments to help address costs of rising inflation and past-due water and utility bills, free public transit, money for health care workers, middle-class health care subsidies, and waiving child care fees for families SACRAMENTO – As people throughout the country face inc
California’s Subsidized Child Care Providers Are Overdue for Pay Raise How Are Subsidized Child Care Providers Paid in California? Subsidized child care providers are paid in one of two ways in California: 1) by accepting vouchers from families or 2) by contracting directly with the state.
Some California school districts launch transitional kindergarten without state help The state mandates transitional kindergarten, but isn’t paying the tab for a small portion of wealthy school districts. Some are balking. In a major shift for early education, California is expanding its transitional kindergarten program to eventually include all 4-year-olds.
A public pre-K expansion doesn’t have to box out private care xpanded exclusively in public school districts, pre-kindergarten has the potential to decimate the nation’s child care market, inadvertently depriving working families of access to infant and toddler care.
Biden says nearly 1.2 million women haven't returned to work because there's no affordable childcare For nearly a year, businesses have been complaining that they can't find workers as labor shortages abound, and the labor market gets tighter and tighter.
In defense of pre-K What one study can — and can’t — tell us about education policy. In January, a team of researchers at Vanderbilt University released a study that seemed to be a serious setback to the push for nationwide, universal pre-K programs.