Sentences with phrase «education grant competition»

Since its founding in 1996, AES has secured hundreds of millions of dollars in education grant competitions for school districts and has evaluated a wide range of education programs.

Not exact matches

Culmination of the program is a competition to create a digitally - oriented solution to a company - specific business challenge with the winner receiving a grant and additional advanced education and consultation.
The scholarship applications have updated and are now in four categories; high school students, college students, professional chefs (for help with continuing education), and culinary team grants (for competing culinary teams participating in ACF regional conference competitions or ACF national convention).
He proposed a new program for distributing education funds modeled on President Barack Obama's state competitions that will grant awards based on school performance and administrative efficiencies.
The breakdown of that number is not clear, but the House version contained $ 2 billion more for research grants; $ 900 million for three infrastructure programs, including a revived $ 200 million extramural facilities competition; and $ 100 million for two education programs.
Now, the school will take those efforts to a new level, after being awarded a $ 1.1 million grant from the American Medical Association in a national competition aimed at accelerating change in medical education.
Partly because of the XQ project's upbeat, open approach, the competition was the first major education - grant program in recent years that didn't set off an immediate wave of public alarm from critics.
That competition offers an enticing carrot — grants ranging from an estimated $ 20 million to $ 700 million each — to states that make strides in four education redesign areas.
An advanced instructional program in the workings of the U.S. government that is class infused with competition, We the People was established by the Center for Civic Education in 1987; a grant from the U.S. Congress has funded it each year.
Washington — The embattled National Institute of Education was under attack again last week, as the Congress moved to cut its budget by 13 percent and to delay the onset of its competition for some $ 30 million in grants to sponsor research through its national laboratories and centers.
Education Secretary Arne Duncan announced Tuesday that 19 states are finalists in the second round of the «Race to the Top» competition for a share of $ 3.4 billion in educatioEducation Secretary Arne Duncan announced Tuesday that 19 states are finalists in the second round of the «Race to the Top» competition for a share of $ 3.4 billion in educationeducation grants.
We take a closer look at this winner of the Harvard Education Innovation Contest, the MIT iGame Entrepreneurial Competition, and a National Science Foundation grant.
As governors and state legislators gear up for a new year of budget action and policymaking, the federal Race to the Top competition is helping to drive a flurry of measures nationwide aimed, at least in part, at making states stronger candidates for a slice of the $ 4 billion in education grants.
Not only has President Barack Obama announced a $ 250 million public - private initiative to recruit and train more STEM teachers, but also the U.S. Department of Education's Race to the Top Fund grants competition is giving bonus points for applications that stress STEM instruction.
Parents armed with $ 500 grants would go directly into the education marketplace, encouraging the same dynamics of choice and competition that have made American universities the envy of the world.
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan picked 18 states and the District of Columbia to advance to the final round of the Race to the Top competition, where 10 to 15 grants totaling $ 3.4 billion will be awarded in September to applicants he believes have the boldest, most sustainable plans for education imprEducation Arne Duncan picked 18 states and the District of Columbia to advance to the final round of the Race to the Top competition, where 10 to 15 grants totaling $ 3.4 billion will be awarded in September to applicants he believes have the boldest, most sustainable plans for education impreducation improvements.
The blow to states - rights principles from national standards could be softened with pledges to block - grant federal education spending and encourage competition through charter schools or school vouchers, along the lines described in the contribution from Chester Finn and Michael Petrilli in this issue (see «A New New Federalism,» p. 48).
When the U.S. Department of Education opened the competition in 2010 for the first round of Promise Neighborhood Grants, it didn't take long for Irasema Salcido, Ed.M.»
It would put the parents of approximately 30 million children directly into the education marketplace, each of them armed with a $ 500 grant, thereby encouraging choice and competition.
Photo by Steve Barrett When the U.S. Department of Education opened the competition in 2010 for the first round of Promise Neighborhood Grants, it didn't take long for Irasema Salcido, Ed.M.»
On March 29, the U.S. Department of Education announced that Tennessee was one of just two states to receive a Race to the Top (RTTT) grant in the first phase of the competition.
As usual, he offers a thoughtful assessment of the pros and cons of Education Secretary Arne Duncan's decision to keep secret the identities of the judges in the $ 4.35 billion grant competition until after winners are announced and Duncan's decision to release minimal detail about how the reviewers were chosen or the substance of the instructions they have received.
The National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Education last week named the winners in new grant competitions.
At the federal level, former U.S. Secretary of Education John B. King Jr. prioritized school diversity through a number of federal grant programs, including the Investing in Innovation Fund, or I3, Magnet School Assistance Program, and Charter School Program grant competitions.11 Additionally, in December 2016, the U.S. Department of Education announced the Opening Doors, Expanding Opportunities grant competition, which will use funds from the 2016 fiscal year to support school districts in increasing socioeconomic diversity in their schools.12
$ 19.4 M Federal SEED Grant Will Grow Ranks of Accomplished, Board - Certified Teachers Teaching and Leading in High - Need Schools ARLINGTON, Va. — October 6, 2015 — The National Board for Professional Teaching Standards has been awarded a $ 19.4 - million grant from the U.S. Department of Education through the 2015 Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED) grant competiGrant Will Grow Ranks of Accomplished, Board - Certified Teachers Teaching and Leading in High - Need Schools ARLINGTON, Va. — October 6, 2015 — The National Board for Professional Teaching Standards has been awarded a $ 19.4 - million grant from the U.S. Department of Education through the 2015 Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED) grant competigrant from the U.S. Department of Education through the 2015 Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED) grant competigrant competition.
ARLINGTON, Va. — October 6, 2015 — The National Board for Professional Teaching Standards has been awarded a $ 19.4 - million grant from the U.S. Department of Education through the 2015 Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED) grant competition.
In the competition for $ 3.4 billion in education grants under President Obama's Race to the Top, Washington is near the bottom.
The U.S. Department of Education (ED) recently opened two competitions of interest to GRC members - the Centers for International Business Education Program and the Teacher Quality Partnership Grant Program.
These awards mark the third round of CityBridge Education's Breakthrough Schools: D.C. school design challenge, a grant competition that challenges schools across D.C. to fundamentally rethink school.
Though the last RTTT grants were awarded to states in late 2011, on August 6, 2013, the Department of Education announced the Race to the Top - District (RTTT - D) competition.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the voluntary benchmarks were strongly pushed by the Obama administration through its $ 4.35 billion Race to the Top education - grant competition, which rewarded states bonus points in their applications if they instituted changes like «college and career ready» standards.
School Improvement Grants, a signature program of U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, have poured about $ 4.6 billion into roughly 1,500 schools, at a cost to the government greater than the entire Race to the Top competition.
In July 2009, the Education Department created Race to the Top, a $ 3.4 billion grant competition.
The U.S. Department of Education announced the start of the $ 150 million 2013 Investing in Innovation (i3) grant competition with the release of the program's invitation for pre-applications for the i3 «Development» grant category and the notice of final priorities for the i3 program overall.
The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) awards SIG grants via a competition for qualifying schools that demonstrate the greatest need and longest commitment to substantially raise student achievement.
The U.S. Department of Education announced the start of the $ 134 million 2014 Investing in Innovation (i3) grant competition with the release of the program's invitation for pre-applications for the i3 «Development» grants (up to $ 3,000,000 each).
The U.S. Department of Education announced today a $ 4 million grant competition for planning and launching high - quality public charter schools through the non-state educational agency grant program.
The U.S. Department of Education recently announced the start of the 2014 grant competition for the Investing in Innovation (i3) program's Scale - up and Validation categories.
An effort by the Los Angeles Unified School District to win a high - profile $ 40 - million grant has unraveled after the L.A. teachers union declined to sign the application, a condition for the competition imposed by the federal education department.
Rhode Island was one of 16 finalists in the first round of the federal Race to the Top competition for education grants.
Etcetera: For the past two years, Dropout Nation has argued that President Barack Obama and U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan should structure future Race to the Top grant competitions to include reform - minded traditional districts, along with charter school operators, and even community groups.
The U.S. Department of Education has opened the third round of its $ 140 million Investing in Innovation (i3) grant competition for districts, groups of schools, and nonprofit organizations to improve student results through innovative practices.
The funding will enable them to run state - level grant competitions to support approximately 400 new and expanded public charter schools, according to the U.S. Department of Education.
The Department of Education is seeking individuals from diverse backgrounds and professions — including preK — 12 and postsecondary educators, educational evaluators, social entrepreneurs, strategy consultants, and grant makers — to serve as peer reviewers for its 2012 Investing in Innovation (i3) Grant Competigrant makers — to serve as peer reviewers for its 2012 Investing in Innovation (i3) Grant CompetiGrant Competition.
As 2011 draws to a close, the U.S. Department of Education has announced the winners of several of its high - profile grant competitions.
The U.S. Department of Education released its proposed requirements for the $ 200 million Race to the Top round three (RttT3) competition, which will allow the nine states to apply for grants that support a portion of their previously established Race to the Top plans and include a meaningful focus on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) eEducation released its proposed requirements for the $ 200 million Race to the Top round three (RttT3) competition, which will allow the nine states to apply for grants that support a portion of their previously established Race to the Top plans and include a meaningful focus on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) educationeducation.
The U.S. Department of Education kicked off the Validation and Scale - Up grant competitions that are part of its $ 150 million 2013 Investing in Innovation (i3) program, which is designed to help school districts and nonprofit and school partnerships implement innovative ideas that improve student learning.
Already a two - time loser in the federal Race to the Top competition, California education officials learned Wednesday that they've been given two new chances to win a share of the reform grant money.
The funding from Title II, Part B from the U.S. Department of Education supports a competitive grant competition for projects that increase the academic achievement of students in mathematics and science by encouraging state education agencies, institutions of higher education, local education agencies, elementary schools, and secondary schools to participate in programs that improve instruction and upgrade the status and stature of mathematics and science Education supports a competitive grant competition for projects that increase the academic achievement of students in mathematics and science by encouraging state education agencies, institutions of higher education, local education agencies, elementary schools, and secondary schools to participate in programs that improve instruction and upgrade the status and stature of mathematics and science education agencies, institutions of higher education, local education agencies, elementary schools, and secondary schools to participate in programs that improve instruction and upgrade the status and stature of mathematics and science education, local education agencies, elementary schools, and secondary schools to participate in programs that improve instruction and upgrade the status and stature of mathematics and science education agencies, elementary schools, and secondary schools to participate in programs that improve instruction and upgrade the status and stature of mathematics and science teaching.
But the New York City system applied for the 2012 grant, which allows districts to differentiate pay for teachers who take on new responsibilities, and Ms. Feinberg, the district spokeswoman, said officials believe their proposal would pass muster with the Education Department's 2012 rules for the competition.
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