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Feds Offer $150 Million In Grants For Innovative Education Ideas

Arne Duncan

DONNA GORDON BLANKINSHIP   06/ 3/11 01:16 AM ET   AP

SEATTLE — The federal government is trying to make it easier to apply for one of its grants for innovative ideas to improve education, but with budget cuts there's a lot less money to give away this year.

In 2010, the U.S. Department of Education gave out $650 million to 49 school districts, charter organization, colleges, universities and other nonprofit organizations for entrepreneurial ideas with the potential of helping the nation's schools. This year, there's $150 million available for the second round of Investments in Innovation or i3 grants, the U.S. Department of Education announced Friday.

Nearly 1,700 groups applied for the 2010 grants, and Jim Shelton, assistant deputy secretary for innovation and improvement, is hoping for another flood of applications this summer. The department particularly wants to encourage innovation in rural education; science, technology, engineering and math learning; supporting effective teachers and principals; implementing high academic standards and quality tests, and turning around persistently low-performing schools.

"There's a tremendous pent-up demand in the field to share innovations that people feel have national implications," he said.

Grants of up to $25 million are being awarded for scaling up education programs with a chosen track record; grants of up to $15 million for growing a program with emerging evidence of success; and grants of up to $3 million for developing promising ideas. In 2010, grants for the same categories were given in amounts up to $50 million, $30 million and $5 million.

The program could have been completely eliminated, but Congress apparently recognized the program's success at attracting creative ideas that could potentially benefit schools across the country, Shelton said.

"The kind of support this program got from the field made it an obvious choice," he said.

The department is offering pre-application workshops and has streamlined the process and the application form to encourage more applications. They are due in August and awards will be made before the end of the year. Finalists will be chosen by independent peer review panels.

Finalists will then have to get additional dollars from another source, such as the local or state government or foundation money, equal to 5-15 percent of the grant, depending on how much is rewarded before they will get a check from the federal government. In 2010, every finalist was able to get that matching money, thanks in part to a foundation-led online grant clearinghouse.

For the second round of grants, the government promises to pay special attention to grants that help rural children and schools. Some money went to rural-focused projects in 2010, but Shelton is hoping to increase the number of rural grants in 2011.

An example of a rural project that got an i3 grant last year was a consortium of 15 school districts in Appalachia working with the Niswonger Foundation of Greeneville, Tenn., to create a college-going culture by using technology to bring more college-prep curriculum to the districts, and helping some schools partner with community colleges to offer dual-credit classes.

The Search Institute in Minneapolis included four locations in Maine in its i3 project to help schools work on non-academic barriers to learning such as truancy and drug use.

Extra points will also be given to applications that focus on improving productivity or technology, help students with disabilities and limited English proficiency, focus on early learning or increase college access and success.

____

Online:

Investment in Innovation: http://www2.ed.gov/programs/innovation/index.html

Foundation Innovation Project Registry: http://foundationregistryi3.org

____

Donna Blankinship can be reached at http://twitter.com/dgblankinship

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SEATTLE — The federal government is trying to make it easier to apply for one of its grants for innovative ideas to improve education, but with budget cuts there's a lot less money to give away ...
SEATTLE — The federal government is trying to make it easier to apply for one of its grants for innovative ideas to improve education, but with budget cuts there's a lot less money to give away ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
methodman
04:26 PM on 06/07/2011
The innovative ideas boil down to how do you get kids to cheaply make interesting toys as they are learning their ciricuulum. Donate Oragami Books to Math Teachers. Would be a starter. Making various scopings for different purposes is fun. Making a slide show of vibration tables progressing through a sequence for? It's cheap. That is the secret. I personally would love to see a radio shack 300 and 1 project kit and all the known chemistry and science consolidated project kits in all the schools. They run $30 a piece so it is not doable The project kit is about $75 so again not doable but wasting paper to make a week of learning fun is a small price to pay..
11:36 PM on 06/06/2011
How about this: U.S. Secretaries of Education must send their kids to closest public school.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
traceydouglas
outside the box
02:58 PM on 06/06/2011
Hi, Arne. Here are some summer reading suggestions for you: http://traceydouglas.blogspot.com/
07:56 AM on 06/06/2011
How about coming to the Save our Schools march, July 28-30 and listen to real teachers, parents, etc. talk about real change needed (www.saveourschoolsmarch.org) Please spread the word!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
traceydouglas
outside the box
02:59 PM on 06/06/2011
I'll be there! I'm coming all the way from the Left Coast, so maybe Arne can make it down the block!
04:48 AM on 06/06/2011
I am willing to write a proposal for free and implement it without taking one penny of grant money.

With an offer like this, you would expect everyone to jump at the chance to, at least, hear what I have to say, right? Don't count on it. I'm just an old retired teacher who lived the nightmare we call education for 33 years. They didn't listen to us (teachers) then, why would they listen now?

My offer is legit. Call me.
12:06 AM on 06/06/2011
How about we take that 150 million and apply it to what we know works, but have never done:
fully fund Headstart for underprivileged kids and raise the teacher to student ratio? Also take all that money we've been handing to for-profit companies for testing and put it in the classroom.
smilingasa
I am a truth teller and a boat rocker
01:38 PM on 06/05/2011
I got one! Bring kids from overseas who REALLY want to learn!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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hornedcog
Tax Tea Now!
10:11 AM on 06/05/2011
If your contribution to society is the "moderation" of conversation, as in the quieting and deletion of opinions that counter yours, you must bask in the rampant ignorance that funds our nations poverty.
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ydnas639
I want my country forward
09:41 AM on 06/05/2011
If we do our nation building at home, and charity does begin at home, and stop the futile SNAFU in Afghanistan, we could raise the grants to $150 billion and start the process to again become the leading nation in the world. Now we are just the world's bully of a cop. Pity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Martha T
We ARE the people!!
10:54 PM on 06/04/2011
Arne, take your newest Jeopardy game and shove it! FUND EDUCATION FAIRLY!
08:50 PM on 06/04/2011
I have a great idea: hold students accountable for their successes and failures.
04:40 PM on 06/04/2011
So hold on. There are grants for schools who have innovative education ideas? What exactly is the purpose of the Department of Education? Just to fund School Districts? Why not ABOLISH the DOE and let individual states govern their own districts?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MiddleAmericaMS
❖News Junkie ❖Progressive ❖ex-Conservative
01:41 AM on 06/04/2011
Every modern teaching room has a full A/V system with powerpoint, etc. It can be done for about $10k per room.

Then proper media needs to be made.

That would be a start.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jackbond
01:27 AM on 06/04/2011
Um, pay teachers better? Where do I pick up my check?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Martha T
We ARE the people!!
10:55 PM on 06/04/2011
yes, how innovative..Meanwhile all of our paychecks are being CUT...The DOE under Duncan is a JOKE
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gem Mayers
08:51 PM on 06/03/2011
Another million dollar idea, get rid of Arne.