1 / 13

Grant writing professional development workshop series

Grant writing professional development workshop series. Cara Binaco March 12, 2011. Choosing a grant. Choose a grant that matches your curricular needs Carefully read the requirements of the grant Avoid grants where matching funds are required unless you have preapproval

sadie
Télécharger la présentation

Grant writing professional development workshop series

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Grant writing professional development workshop series Cara Binaco March 12, 2011

  2. Choosing a grant • Choose a grant that matches your curricular needs • Carefully read the requirements of the grant • Avoid grants where matching funds are required unless you have preapproval • Note requirements for proposal length, margin and font size

  3. Parts of the grant proposal • Executive Summary • The Statement of Need • Project Description • Budget • Organization Information • Conclusion • Evaluation of Outcomes • Indicators of Success

  4. Executive summary • Summarizes the rest of the proposal • States the case succinctly • Clearly describes the objectives of the student learning outcomes • Explains what is being done so that the funders can understand the project • Presents need for the project and the results expected from it • Emphasize key points that are important to the funder. • Be complete but brief; no longer than one page

  5. The Statement of need • Identifies a real need and makes clear connections to your curriculum • Specifies what is needed such as technology, books and surroundings • States how the need was determined from observations, teacher surveys and meetings with parents and administrators. • Relates need to the mission of the funder • Uses statistics that support your argument and compares to similar projects with positive results

  6. Project description • Thoroughly describes the project including the beneficiaries, supplies and staff needed and timeframe to meet the goals of the project • Clearly states what the teacher does • Clearly states what the students do • Includes hands-on activities • States how the project is new or different • Matches your needs to the grant • Shows how the project will help students achieve state test skills • Addresses all thematic categories of the foundation’s request for proposal • Overall, is similar to writing a good innovative lesson plan!

  7. Budget • Tells what funds will be used for the project • States what materials and other resources are needed to run the project • Provides an itemized list of how the funds of the grant will be allocated. • Specifically states the direct costs the project involves including personnel, equipment and the type and number materials needed • Is aligned in columns with headings

  8. Organization information • Identifies the target population of the grant • States the number of students and teachers that will benefit from the grant • Demonstrates how your project can benefit other students in the district, outside the district and the community • Involves stakeholders • Check Board of Education and Principal to determine approval needed to submit a grant • Meet with designated grant writer in the district if there is one.

  9. Organization information (continued) • Includes full legal name of your organization • Includes addresses for headquarters and other operating sites • Summarizes your organization’s programs • Describes the role in the community and relationship to other organizations • Emphasizes key points of organization’s overall budget and achievements related to the grant request • Describes the board, administration and staff

  10. conclusion • Summarizes the project and connects the project goals to the goals of the foundation • Uses professional language from in the application • Addresses the requirements of the application • Describes after the grant is completed

  11. Evaluation outcomes • Looks at the impact, benefits and changes that the project has on the targeted beneficiaries • Contains developed assessment techniques • Has a written scoring criteria • Assesses what students learned from the project • Shows that you remain involved in the project • Stays within budget and tracks spending • Is detail oriented • Evaluates your project in a timely manner • Provides donor with information requested

  12. Indicators of success • Graphs to showcase student achievement • Charts demonstrating student accomplishments • Advertised success in the district and the community • Timing, fit and public interest • Visibility of the grant in the community • A compelling, clear case

  13. Bibliography • ING Unsung Heroes Grant Application, (2011) retrieved March 12, 2011from ING Web Site: http://ing.us/about-ing/citizenship/childrens-education/ing-unsung-heroes • Mott, D. & Twomey, C. (2008 November) Effective Grant Writing for Librarians, Powerpoint presentation • (2011, February) Tips From a Multi-Grant Winner, NSTA Reports, Arlington, VA, p.12 • Brooks, D. (March 2008) Grant writing for beginners. Technology and Learning. 28, 38.

More Related