Not many would be aware of the rooftop solar panels on the Visitor Center at the Port of Burlington if it wasn't for the sophisticated monitoring system made possible by
a Bright Ideas grant.
Sebastopol's Reach Charter School won a $ 10,000
Bright Ideas grant from PG&E to pursue a long - term monitoring project on a local waterway.
Not exact matches
The pilot was conducted in five Title 1 schools across five school districts in North Carolina and yielded significant results that became the basis for a Javits
Grant (PR / Award #S206A040057) awarded by the U.S. Department of Education for
Bright IDEA 2 (2004 - 2010).
The purpose of this
grant is to implement Project
Bright IDEA (Interest Development Early Abilities) on a larger scale.
2014 - 2019 - Project
Bright IDEA 3: Nurturing for a
Bright Tomorrow in Wake County Schools — A Javits Education Program
Grant was awarded to the REDY Center in September 2014 to scale - up the research to 32 schools.
Based on the success of Project
Bright IDEA 1, a pilot intervention program for closing the achievement gap, Project
Bright IDEA 2 was awarded the
grant to «upscale» the program to more schools and to research the impact on gifted programs from underserved populations.
Project
Bright IDEA 1 was funded by NCDPI through the Exceptional Children Division and Raising Achievement and Closing Gaps Section and by The American Association for Gifted Children at Duke University through a
grant from the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation and private donations.