SJSU offers new early education teaching credential programs

In one of the first-in-the-state programs, San Jose State University will offer a new teaching credential this fall for educators interested in teaching three-year-olds through third graders.

In May, the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing established the new PK-3 credential in the hopes of addressing a nationwide teacher shortage and expanding the early education workforce.

Heather Lattimer, dean of the university’s college of education, said the college’s faculty collaborated across the college’s child and adolescent development, special education and teacher education departments to quickly develop the “highly inclusive program.”

“SJSU was uniquely positioned to respond quickly to this critical need,” Lattimer said in a spring press release announcing the program.

The program comes three years after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law requiring any school district offering kindergarten to also provide transitional kindergarten for all four-year-olds by the 2025-26 school year.

The $2.7 billion transitional kindergarten program aims to make free, high-quality early education available to every 4-year-old in the state — nearly 400,000 – becoming the largest universal preschool program in the country.

But the state’s ambitious goal faces one looming challenge — teacher staffing.

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