Early Childhood Educators

children raising their hands in classroom

Learn how to incorporate research-based PBS KIDS television programming into your curriculum and use it as an interactive learning tool to enhance children's reading and math skills, build their vocabulary, and support their healthy physical, social, and emotional development. KQED can show you how to help young children navigate our media-filled world through instructional workshops, educational materials, and special events.

Using Media as a Learning Tool

Early childhood educators and parents can use KQED's award-winning PBS KIDS programming and resources to engage children in fun educational experiences that help them enter school ready to learn. Learn about ways to guide a child's viewing experience.

Hands on Literacy

KQED Hands On Literacy unites the power of television with the magic of books, language, and literacy - furthering our commitment to family education.

Workshops

KQED Early Learning workshops are designed to help transform television viewing from passive babysitter to a rewarding learning experience for children.


A Place of Our Own Workshops

Early Learning is proud to partner with KCET to provide training workshops in English and Spanish for parents and/or family, friend, and neighbor caregivers of young children from birth to five years old.

Blog: learning.now @ PBS Teachers
  • Boosting Public Broadband, One Library At A Time

    This week, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced a $7 million grant to invest in the expansion in broadband access in libraries across seven states. While $7 million may sound like chump change from a foundation that routinely spends hundreds of millions at a time on public heath philanthropy, it serves as an important reminder of the continuing role that libraries play in bridging the digital divide.

  • Lori Drew Convicted in Megan Meier Case

    Last week, a jury in California convicted Lori Drew on misdemeanor charges related to the Megan Meier suicide case. Though public sentiment wanted to see her convicted specifically on Drew cyberbullying Meier into committing suicide, in the end she was found guilty of violating MySpace?s terms of service. Was justice served?

  • Case Closed for Julie Amero

    Julie Amero, the substitute teacher subjected to a judicial roller coaster ride over whether she intentionally exposed a group of students to inappropriate computer images, ended her legal limbo by agreeing to a plea deal this Friday. It?s the end of a long road for Amero, but was justice served?

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