Join Now

Want news that’s as fresh as your morning coffee? Join our community and stay in the know!

Our favorite early childhood education stories this year

Date:

Share:

Happy holidays, and to those of you who are celebrating today, Merry Christmas! I am so grateful for your readership this year. Reporting on early childhood is an immense privilege, and I appreciate the conversations and story ideas you send my way, as well as the many early educators, experts and parents who have welcomed me into their classrooms and lives.

As 2024 winds down, I wanted to share some of the stories that have resonated most with me this year:

  • First, cozy up with a cup of cocoa and allow yourself to be transported to Norway, where childhood is seen as a time of innate value and child care programs are required to be rooted in values like empathy and “a belief in human worth.” When I visited Norway earlier this year, I was awed by their entire approach to childhood, which is especially evident in their early childhood programs. Seeing Norway’s approach made me hopeful for what’s possible in early childhood.
  • We know child care is an exorbitant cost for families in America, but some are lucky enough to obtain free, high-quality care if they cross paths with the right philanthropist. That’s what I found from a visit to a new early childhood network in Pennsylvania, funded by the Milton Hershey School Trust (yes, of the Hershey family).
  • Earlier this year, my colleague Sarah Carr reported on a topic that is woefully undercovered. Even though most infants and toddlers are cared for in home-based settings, their providers often don’t know they are entitled to pay. Accessing pay for child care services provided by friends, family and neighbors could make a huge economic difference for these (mostly) women.
  • Carr also reported this year on a largely hidden issue that has long impacted families of children with disabilities and delays, particularly intellectual disabilities and conditions like Down syndrome. For decades, flawed IQ tests have been used to “gauge young children’s potential and assess whether they are ‘worthy’ of extra help or investment.”
  • And finally, earlier this month I published the results of a year-long investigation into state efforts to deregulate child careby lowering training requirements, putting teenagers to work as child care teachers and raising ratios and group sizes.As part of that story, my colleague Sara Hutchinson and I uncovered disturbing conditions inside child care programs in many states.

Next year, I’m planning stories on district pre-K investment, early childhood inclusion and elementary classroom management, among others. I’ll also be sharing some examples of what other countries are doing in the early childhood realm, and I will continue to track federal and state early childhood policies. As always, I’d love to hear what’s on your mind. Feel free to respond to this email and I’ll be in touch!

Finally, as a nonprofit news outlet, we rely on the generosity of individual donors to keep the organization running and help fund this journalism. If you are able to donate, please consider making a gift to help support more of this work in 2025.

Wishing you the best in the new year.

Jackie

Help The Hechinger Report investigate special education

This story about early childhood education was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.

The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

Join us today.

Unmatched Baby Essentials

baby

━ more like this

Fantasian Is A Perfect Retro Final Fantasy Throwback

My life changed when I first played Final Fantasy VII in the late ‘90s. The narrative-focused RPG chronicling the struggle of misfit adventurers on...

How the Air Force can move from storming to norming hair standards

Three years ago, we wrote about the changes to hair standards for women service members and the invisible labor behind this policy change. Earlier...

Fans Debate If First Look At Switch 2 Is Real Or An AI Fake

Earlier this month, an anonymous Reddit user popped up with claims of having seen a Switch 2 model firsthand. The Verge and others found...

With his track ablaze, this soldier found a way to destroy an enemy tank

By the time the United States entered World War II, its Army had adopted three forms of tracked armored fighting vehicles.The light tank was...

Wallace and Gromit Creator Says No To A Live-Action Remake

Over the last few years, we’ve seen a lot of live-action remakes of popular animated movies. Will Wallace & Gromit ever get a Disney-like...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here