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Find similar grantsAccess E-Grants is sponsored by Louisiana Department of Education. Grants Quick Links <a href="/school-system-leaders/school-system-finances/grants/federal-grants" class="quickLink" id="06ca0311-28de-46 Category: Education.
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Access E-Grants is funded by Louisiana Department of Education. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
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Special Education Funding is a grant from the Louisiana Department of Education that funds programs, services, and supports for students with disabilities in Louisiana public schools. Supported activities include special education instruction, related services, assistive technology, transition planning, and professional development for educators serving students under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Eligible recipients include Louisiana local education agencies, school districts, and approved nonpublic schools serving students with disabilities. Award amounts are determined by federal and state allocation formulas.
Education Excellence Fund (EEF) is a grant from the Louisiana Department of Education that funds educational excellence initiatives for local education agencies across the state. Established in 1999 through the Louisiana Millennium Trust using tobacco settlement proceeds, the EEF distributes funds to eligible LEAs based on student enrollment — 85% of the appropriation flows through enrollment-based allocations. The fund is governed by Louisiana Revised Statutes 39:98.1–39:98.5, which restricts all expenditures to activities supporting excellence in educational practice. Public school districts and local education agencies in Louisiana are the primary eligible recipients.
Educational Technology, Media, and Materials for Individuals with Disabilities Program (Stepping-up Technology Implementation competition) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Education. This program aims to improve results for students with disabilities by promoting the development, demonstration, and use of technology; supporting educational activities of value in the classroom for students with disabilities; providing captioning and video description; and ens…
The Robotics Grant Program is a grant from the Alabama State Department of Education (ALSDE) that funds school-based robotics programs for elementary, middle, and high school students. Awarded through a competitive application process, the program provides up to $3,500 to eligible local education agencies (LEAs) in Alabama. Applicants must be public school systems submitting on behalf of schools with K–12 students. The grant supports the purchase of robotics equipment and program development aligned with AMSTI guidelines. Applications are submitted online through the AMSTI Robotics Grant portal. The Fiscal Year 2026 application deadline was September 30, 2025. Questions should be directed to robotics@amsti.org. The program is managed by the Alabama State Department of Education under State Superintendent Eric G. Mackey.
The Department of Education's IES SBIR program is one of the most overlooked non-dilutive funding sources for education-technology startups. It funds prototypes at $250K and proven products at $1M with no equity taken. Here is how the FY2026 tracks work, what reviewers reward, and why the June 29 deadline is tighter than it looks.
Read articleNSF's CAREER program — a minimum $400,000 over five years for pre-tenure faculty — has a single annual deadline on July 22, 2026. It rewards the integration of research and education, not research alone, and that is exactly where most proposals fail. Here is the eligibility math, the integration trap, and how to position in a tightening federal funding climate.
Read articleFederal appropriators added $15 billion in new Pell Grant funding to the FY 2026 appropriations package on top of the standard appropriation level — a response to a structural shortfall that CBO scored at $5.4 billion in FY 2026 and $11.5 billion in FY 2027. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projects a cumulative gap of $61 billion to $97 billion through 2035 even after the one-time fix. Meanwhile, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act expanded eligibility to short-term Workforce Pell programs, adding $2 to $6 billion in new costs. The Pell program is the foundation of need-based federal student aid, but the structural mismatch between rising costs and appropriations is a permanent feature now. Here is what that means for institutions, foundations, and state higher-ed agencies.
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