this post was submitted on 06 May 2025
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White House proposes giving out $5,000 checks to address falling birthrates amid growing ‘pronatalist’ movement

One of Donald Trump’s priorities for his second term is getting Americans to have more babies – and the White House has a new proposal to encourage them to do so: a $5,000 “baby bonus”.

The plan to give cash payments to mothers after delivery shows the growing influence of the “pronatalist” movement in the US, which, citing falling US birthrates, calls for “traditional” family values and for women – particularly white women – to have more children.

But experts say $5,000 checks won’t lead to a baby boom. Between unaffordable health care, soaring housing costs, inaccessible childcare and a lack of federal parental leave mandates, Americans face a swath of expensive hurdles that disincentivize them from having large families – or families at all – and that will require a much larger government investment to overcome.

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[–] MrScottyTay@sh.itjust.works 4 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

High school would be mostly secondary school I think.

Primary is like from ages 5-11, with secondary being 11-16.

College/sixth form 16-19 and Uni 18+

(In context of the UK)

[–] sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

... All Im really aware of as far as terminology goes is that basically its different everywhere, even inside the US.

What it was for me: grades 1 - 5 are elementary, 6-8 are middle school and 9 -12 is high school.

But different areas ... either don't do a middle school, or call it something else, or its only 2 grades instead of 3... it varies.

By the time you are done with all this, you are 18 yo.

So... 2nd grade is basically the schooling level of an 8 yo. 6th grade is the schooling of a 12 yo.

After that, you're going to a college, community college, university, something like that, to get a 2 or 4 year year degree (associates or bachelors), then another 2 after a bachelors for a masters, roughly another 2 after that for a PhD (doctorate).. but there is also variation in terms of exact education track and how long it actually takes to complete them vs how long its 'supposed to take'.

Public education in the US generally stops at grade 12, and then any college/etc after that is 'secondary', as in 'optional'.

EDIT: Adjusted age dates. I just woke up from a nap, blarrrgh.