Isis Mabel made just $4.50 an hour caring for three children when she arrived in Massachusetts from Mexico as an...
Play Is a Child’s Search for Meaning: Q&A with Brenda Fyfe
Part 8 in “Seasons of Play” Series
To learn more about play’s place in the Reggio Emilia approach, Early Learning Nation magazine spoke to Brenda Fyfe, dean and professor emeritus of the School of Education at Webster University.
On January 31, the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) hosted a discussion exploring how the environment affects early childhood development and what we can do to address the impact of climate change on young children.
Having eyes in the back of your head isn’t in the job description, but it sure helps. One twin is...
While we’re taking Early Learning Nation Studio on the road less often during the pandemic, we’re offering recaps—Top Takeaways—from important...
Last fall, I received an email from a distraught mother.
One sentence can hold a lot of heartache. This one, for instance: Babies born to mothers on Medicaid died at...
Elliot Haspel is clear about one thing regarding business and child care: he believes that on-site child care or business-supported...
On a recent sunny Friday morning at the Daposka Ahnkodapi School in Pawhuska, Okla., the day began with weekly circle...
In upstate New York, like many other parts of the country, the supply of child care has failed to keep...
Advocacy shifts into high gear during campaign season. While child care and early education will never have the lobbying firepower of industries like Big Pharma and utilities, the sector boasts a number of dynamic nonprofits dedicated to engaging candidates and voters on issues that matter for families with young children.
First, the good news. As it turns out, the so-called summer slide might not be the threat to our nation’s...














