- Educated Kids Grants from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation
- Mary McMullan Grants from the National Art Education Foundation (NAEF)
- Youth Incentive Award from the Coleopterists Society
- Technology Grants For Rural Schools from the Foundation for Rural Education and Development (FRED)
- Teacher Art Grants from P. Buckley Moss Foundation for Children’s Education
- Educational Grants from the Amaturo Family Foundation
- Advancing Student Achievement Math Grants from the Actuarial Foundation
- Computers for Learning from the U.S. General Services Administration
- Foundation Grants from the Stephen and Mary Birch Foundation
- IWP Foundation Educational Grants from the Innovating Worthy Projects Foundation
Category Archives: Grant Research
How Many Grants Will You Write This Year?
The question is not whether you should write grants for your school this year. The question is can you write and receive enough grant funds to offset budget shortfalls without supplanting district responsibilities? It would be wonderful if one big gigantic grant could pick up the tab for whatever your teachers will need. Wonderful but unlikely. What can you do about it?
I suggest you do three things to help with this challenge:
First, if you are not already using the School Funding Center database, you need to begin using it now. With full disclosure – this blog is tied to the database. The valuable data you will find here will allow you to spend your time filling out grant applications and less time looking for grants that are a fit for your school.
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Data Driven Decision Making for Grant Writers
Summertime is busy. At least it is in my world of grant writing. It’s a time to reflect and adjust priorities for the years to come. The only surefire way to do this right is to let the data be your guide.
I’ve put together a couple of scenarios to illustrate my point.
Scenario #1
We’ve created a focus group to decide what we need for our school next year. The leadership team includes stakeholders from many parts of our school community, grants administrators, department heads, teachers and some parents. One of the members of the group, a parent, is very aggressive and insists we need new reading books for the early grades. The old ones are “musty and torn”. The administrators in our group have been criticized in the past for never taking parents’ advice or suggestions. He is inclined to take the path of least resistance and fix the complaints all in one fell swoop. He appoints a reading teacher to a team to review and select a new reading series.
Scenario #2
Current Grant Opportunities – June 2014
- Peace Projects from the Journalists and Writers Foundation (JWF)
- Improving Community Education Grants from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
- Program Development Grant from the Society of Women Engineers
- School Garden Grants from the Whole Kids Foundation
- Foundation Grants from Mitsubishi Electric America Foundation
- My Macy’s District Grants from the Macy’s Foundation
- Pitsco/Hearlihy/FTEE Grant from the Foundation for Technology and Engineering Educators
- NFL Player Matching Youth & High School Football Grant Program from the National Football League Foundation
- Yearbook Adviser of the Year from the Journalism Education Association
- USGA Alliance Grants from the National Alliance for Accessible Golf
Extra Money at the End of the Year?
This year, you have profited from the School Funding Center Database, and unbelievably, it is the end of the year. I’m always brought up short when that realization hits. Bam! OMG how am I going to close out this year with some dignity?
One thing that often happens to grant managers, they end up with extra money at the end of the year. You may have over budgeted for supplies, one of your paid workers dropped out; you didn’t need as much equipment as you thought… extra cash. How do you prepare for this possibility?
Each year, at the beginning of the school year, I ask certain key people to make wish lists of things they need for their classroom. Obviously your principal will have such a list, but don’t forget your Library Media Specialist, the fine arts people, the physical education staff. They are often the last to receive money in a budget, and the ones with the greatest needs. Isn’t it always the way?
Five Things You’ll Forget to Put in Your Budget (Grant writing pitfalls)
You’ve visited the School Funding Center Database, and finally, after much thought and hard work, you have written a narrative for a grant from a foundation you have identified. You really want to start a relationship with this organization, and you know you must WOW them with your first effort. Even if this attempt doesn’t light their fire, you want to make a great first impression.
You’ve worked with your stakeholders in school to identify a STEM project for after school enrichment to attack those pesky math scores you’ve been trying to raise. You have skillfully woven math instruction into a project based science experiment you know the students will love to pursue. They’ll learn in spite of themselves.
So, you’re ready to pull your budget together. I’ve given you a budget template to help you organize your thoughts as you prepare for the program. Nevertheless, there are five things you are liable to forget.
Current Grant Opportunities- May 2014
- Educational Grants from the Bridgestone Americas Trust Fund
- Educational Grants from the Eaton Charitable Fund
- Partners in Science Program from the M. J. Murdock Charitable Trust
- The Lorrie Otto Seeds for Education Grant Program from the Wild Ones
- Family Service Community Grants from Autism Speaks
- Educational Grants from the Gladys and Roland Harriman Foundation
- Educational Grants from the Chichester duPont Foundation, Inc
- Educational Grants from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
- AIAA Classroom Grants from the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)
- Serves Grants from the United States Tennis Association (USTA)
When Your Grant Application Fails
Life is never perfect. Despite your most rigorous efforts, sometimes the magic just does not work. You applied for a sizable grant from a foundation to help your school develop a better professional development strategy. You thought this was a slam dunk, everyone is interested in school improvement, and PD is a big part of it. Your school needs to train its teachers to try new things, integrate the curriculum with new standards, develop better classroom tests, and implement a new reading series.
Your budget was realistic. You need to have stipends for teachers who will stay late for training. You included travel items for that PD conference in Chicago. The conference was not a fun thing, it was specifically targeted to the professional development plan your teachers have begun. You included materials for the teacher’s corner in the Library Media Center all aligned with new standards. Even with all these bases covered, you received a “no” letter. What do we do now?
What more could you have done?
School Improvement Grants: Did They or Didn’t They? (Improve Schools)
Flash back to 2008 (if you dare). The country (the world) was an economic nightmare, banks and brokerage firms were dissolving into thin air, and people were scared. We’ve crept back step by step, but during those dark days, if you were engaged in work in public education, and cared about struggling schools, you were very concerned about sources of survival funds. Cities and towns, dependent on tax revenues, were preparing to slash jobs and cut programs just to keep doors open.
Enter a democratic president whose number one goal and mission was to expand educational opportunity for everyone. Enter ARRA (American Recovery and Reinvestment Act) funds to fill the gaps we would have faced. I remember the management tasks attached to those funds, see these gray hairs? Our district was audited, people with clipboards and attitudes were in evidence, but somehow, I didn’t mind. There was something comforting about knowing that the dollars were being scrutinized. Our district had followed the rules to the letter and the penny, so the clipboards went away and we carried on. Blessedly they didn’t return. It was a great lesson in “get it right the first time”.
Keeping Records for Your Grant Awards
You’ve received the call (letter) that congratulates you for your successful application for a grant. You are elated, and you should be very proud of this accomplishment. Remember you were in competition for the award, other applications were vetoed. Grantors are very careful about awarding grants. They know the project they have chosen will reflect on them. Their political or social agenda will be furthered or hampered by the project you will launch.
The first thing you must do is handle the check properly. When it comes in, it will probably be sent to your attention unless other arrangements have been made (large awards may have bank transfer arrangements so you will never actually see the check). Your school district business manager will help you develop procedures for this step; the check must be deposited in an account that can be accessed as you work through your project.