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=============================================================== Volume 5, Issue 6 by Don Peek Sometimes I'm amazed when people ask me about projects they'd like to fund with grant money. I've had people ask me to direct them to the grants that will pay for their senior class to go to France. I've had football boosters who needed a grant that would build them a new field house. At least once a year, someone needs to find a grant that will help keep a job that's being cut. I'm not saying that grantors never fund projects like these. I'd say it's more like a one-in-a-million shot. That's not never, but it's really close. The majority of grant money seems to be set aside for academic problems that schools face. To a lesser degree, the arts get a good share of grant money. Quite a bit of money is also available for technology. More and more attention is being paid to the environment and environmental projects in schools. One more hot grant topic is school nutrition and child obesity. Naturally, it is always a help when one of these topics also falls within the realm of broader academic problems. Reading and math grants lead the pack in sheer numbers, but science grants are relatively numerous, too. Within these grants, do schools have an advantage if they have a large population of low-socioeconomic-status and at-risk students? Yes, they do, but that doesn't mean other schools don't have a shot at plenty of grant money. As I've often said, finding grant money for your school is a numbers game. You cast a wide net using a school grants database, and then you narrow and narrow until you find the grants you are most eligible to receive. If you complete one grant proposal, and you're not all that eligible in the first place, chances are you're not going to get a lot of grant money. If you apply for five grants that exactly match your needs and qualifications, you have a very good chance of getting grant money. With all of that said, there are still grants out there that fill some unusual needs. One grantor resurfaces several tracks each year. Another helps build baseball fields. Another supports soccer programs. One helps build skateboard parks. Another helps build bicycle paths. Target has a large program that funds field trips for schools. Several organizations let you advertise your project and help you find sponsors for it. One organization helps put used band instruments into needy schools. Another gives good, used computers to schools. All in all, I'd say most worthy projects can find grant backing if you are both patient and persistent. You just have to think about the grantors. Would they rather see their money being spent to send a senior class to France or to help at-risk students in an inner-city school read better? In summary, it is going to be easier for you to find grant money to fund projects in the areas of reading, math, science, technology, the arts, the environment and nutrition/childhood obesity. Still, that does not mean grant money is not available for a host of other worthwhile projects. It is easiest to find the grant money you need using the following grant databases: http://www.schoolfundingcenter.net (all school grants of all types) Don Peek is former educator and past president of the training division of Renaissance Learning. He now runs The School Funding Center, a company that provides grant information and grant-writing services to schools. Learn more about The School Funding Center at the bottom of this newsletter.
Funded by: Description: Program Areas: Recipients: Proposal Deadline: Average Amount: Telephone: Email: Website: Availability: =============================================================== Grant Name: Funded by: Description: Program Areas: Recipients: Proposal Deadline: Average Amount: Telephone: Website: All States =============================================================== Grant Name: Funded by: Description: Program Areas: Recipients: Proposal Deadline: Average amount: Telephone: Website: Availability: =============================================================== Grant Name: Funded by: Description: Program Areas: Recipients: Proposal Deadline: Average Amount: Telephone: Email: Website: Availability: =============================================================== Grant Name: Funded by: Description: Program Areas: Recipients: Proposal Deadline: Average Amount: Email: Website: Availability: =============================================================== Resources-Teachers http://www.resources-teachers.com This site also provides teachers with nursery rhymes, short stories, games for the playground, fairy tales, and links for more free stuff. Check it out!
The Education World Grants Newsletter is written by Don Peek, former educator and past president of the training division of Renaissance Learning. He now runs The School Funding Center, a company that provides grant information and grant-writing services to schools. The School Funding Center Grant Database attempts to list every grant available to schools across the United States. It is updated daily and currently contains more than 110,000 grant opportunities worth more than $6.5 billion. If you are serious about getting grant money for your school, you may want to subscribe to The School Funding Center Grant Database. Order your subscription today! Don't forget that you can do limited free searches in our huge school grant database by going to http://www.schoolfundingcenter.com. =============================================================== If you enjoy this Education World Grants Newsletter, please feel free to forward it to others. If this newsletter has been forwarded to you, you may sign up for it -- and any of the other Education World newsletters -- at http://www.educationworld.com/maillist.shtml.
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What Projects Will Grants Fund? 
In each issue, Don Peek recommends a Web resource, book, software program, or another useful tool of interest to the grants community. 
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