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Find similar grantsCarolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation Grants is sponsored by Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation. Offers grants to nonprofit organizations and local government entities in rural Oklahoma, focusing on projects that enhance arts, literacy, health, safety, and economic development.
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Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation | OCCF Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation Participants build rabbit tractors at Longshadows Ranch, a Carolyn Watson Rural Community Grant recipient. Improving the Quality of Life in Rural Oklahoma Carolyn Watson, longtime chair and CEO of Shamrock Bancshares and proud resident of Coalgate, was a woman of action with a deep commitment to improving life in rural Oklahoma.
Born in Ada and a graduate of East Central University, she understood both the unique challenges and opportunities that exist in rural communities. In 1995, she established the Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation, an affiliated fund of the Oklahoma City Community Foundation, to strengthen the southern Oklahoma communities where her banks operated.
Through her vision, the foundation has supported projects that enhance education, literacy, arts and culture, health and safety, and economic development across rural Oklahoma. In 2010, Carolyn expanded her philanthropy by creating the Carolyn Watson Opportunities Scholarship, helping rural students attend college and pursue their goals.
After her passing on March 17, 2014, at the age of 86, Carolyn left behind a lasting legacy that will continue to enrich classrooms, empower communities and expand opportunities for generations to come. Kids attend a naturalist presentation by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Established in 1995 by Carolyn Watson, longtime chair and CEO of Shamrock Bancshares, the Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation is dedicated to improving the quality of life in rural Oklahoma. The Community Grants support initiatives that strengthen libraries and literacy, arts and culture, health and safety, and economic development in rural communities.
The organization must improve the quality of life in rural Oklahoma through one or more of the following: Awards are made up to $30,000. All projects proposed must align with the published Grant Guidelines. Eligibility requirements and application process instructions are also included in the Grant Guidelines.
Jan. 27, 2026 – Grant Application Opens Feb. 26, 2026, 5:00 p.
m. – Letter of Intent (LOI) Deadline Mar. 12, 2026, 5:00 p.
m. – Grant Application Deadline May 2026 – Decision Notification All deadlines are firm. No exceptions.
Letters of Intent (LOIs) and full applications must be submitted through the OCCF Grant Portal. Detailed application instructions are available in the Grant Guidelines. To see our list of recent grantees, please click here .
Classroom Enhancement Grants The Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation Classroom Enhancement Grants improve the quality of life in rural Oklahoma by providing classroom grants that allow Pre-K through 12th-grade educators to go beyond traditional curriculum and enrich the teaching environment for their students and provide resources they would not otherwise have access to in their everyday classroom activities.
The grant application period has closed. Please see below for more information on this grant, and check back next Summer for more opportunities . The grant range is up to $5,000 per classroom.
View the previous year’s Grant Guidelines* . The projects funded must provide opportunities for rural educators and students through one or more of the following: Creative and Innovative Approaches Beyond the Classroom Learning Opportunities To see our list of recent grantees, please click here .
Below, you will find a list of resources to help spark ideas for field trips, activities and lessons to engage your students and enhance your classrooms.
Oklahoma Shakespeare in the Park Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art Oklahoma City Philharmonic Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Oklahoma Department of Libraries International Literacy Association National Education Association: Read Across America International Children’s Digital Library SOS for Information Literacy Oklahoma Museums Association Edmond Historical Society & Museum Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum Oklahoma Humanities Council National Endowment for the Humanities National Museum of the American Indian Science, Technology, Engineering & Math (STEM) Oklahoma Ag in the Classroom Oklahoma Energy Resources Board KISS Institute for Practical Robotics National Science Teachers Association National Wildlife Federation Fiscal Year 2025 Community Grants Fiscal Year 2026 Classroom Grants Fiscal Year 2025 Classroom Grants Fiscal Year 2024 Community Grants Fiscal Year 2024 Classroom Grants AIRC Inc. – $20,000 – To support an experiential youth development program for middle school students that integrates American Indian values to build resilience, promote wellness and prevent substance abuse.
Mid-America Arts Alliance – $11,000 – To strengthen Oklahoma’s rural arts ecosystem by equipping artists with essential entrepreneurial skills through Artist INC Express (AIX) workshops. Oklahoma Forest Heritage Center Inc. – $5,000 – To support the Beavers Bend Fold Festival and Craft Show, showcasing traditional folk arts, live music and handcrafted goods.
Oklahoma Historical Society – $3,000 – To support a three-day history camp for youth that brings Fort Towson’s past to life through interactive learning experiences. Oklahoma Museums Association – $10,000 – To strengthen rural museums by providing professional development in marketing, fundraising, collections care and digital accessibility.
The Woody Guthrie Coalition Inc. – $2,500 – To support a free creative writing workshop at the Woody Guthrie Folk Festival (WoodyFest) that engages students in storytelling, songwriting and reflection. Caddo Kiowa Technology Center – $35,000 – To support workforce development in rural southwest Oklahoma by training electrical line workers to replace retiring professionals and meet industry demands in communities and cooperatives.
Communities Unlimited – $20,000 – To support rural small businesses through 1-on-1 technical assistance, financial literacy training and business development resources. Longshadows Ranch LTD – $20,000 – To support a hands-on agricultural training program designed to teach youth and young adults sustainable and profitable farming practices.
Zoe Institute Inc. – $20,000 – To support Work Ready Tahlequah, part of the statewide Work Ready Oklahoma initiative, which helps financially vulnerable Oklahomans—including veterans, the unemployed and those re-entering society—gain skills for long-term employment. Compassion Outreach Center Inc. – $15,000 – To help expand medical and dental care for uninsured residents in Coal County.
D-DENT – $10,000 – To help improve oral health care access for low-income, uninsured individuals in rural Oklahoma through partnerships with local dental clinics and volunteer professionals.
LIFT Community Action Agency – $30,000 – To enhance mental health, well-being and safety for individuals in Choctaw, McCurtain and Pushmataha counties by expanding access to behavioral health treatment, recovery support services and community safety initiatives.
Oklahoma State University Foundation – $20,000 – To support the Project ECHO Initiative, which uses telementoring technology to expand access to specialized health care in rural and underserved Oklahoma communities—improving patient outcomes, strengthening care networks and increasing health care accessibility.
Stigler Health & Wellness Center Inc. – $20,000 – To support HarvestRx, which integrates nutrition support into health care to address diet-related diseases in rural Oklahoma. SW Oklahoma Regional Transportation Planning Organization – $30,000 – To help improve transportation access for underserved populations in Caddo and Kiowa Counties, enabling better connections to health care, employment, education and food resources.
Butterfly Rain New Beginnings – $20,000 – To support an afterschool and summer literacy initiative, in partnership with Lowrey Public School, that promotes reading among early childhood through middle school students. Cartwright Memorial Library – $6,500 – To help expand the Cartwright Library tutoring program to strengthen reading and math skills, with dedicated support for individuals working toward their GED.
Eastern Oklahoma Library System / Muskogee Public Library – $20,000 – To provide GED preparation, Adult Basic Education, English as a Second Language, U.S. Citizenship test prep and computer/media literacy through hybrid classes in Adair, Cherokee and McIntosh counties.
Hobart Public Library – $3,000 – To help maintain and expand access to the Overdrive E-Books program, ensuring that more community members can utilize digital reading resources. KI BOIS Community Action – $3,000 – To promote early literacy, school readiness and parent-child engagement by providing monthly books to children in Haskell County.
Choctaw County Ambulance Authority – $25,000 – To support the Star Life Rural EMS Conference that offers free continuing education for EMTs, paramedics, firefighters, police and health care professionals from southeast Oklahoma and surrounding states.
Coalgate Fire Department / City of Coalgate – $25,000 – To provide six sets of bunker gear (boots, pants, coats, helmets, Nomex hoods and flashlights) and two thermal imaging cameras for the Coalgate firefighters. Fort Towson Volunteer Fire Department – $28,845 – To provide new turnout gear to 11 volunteer firefighters, including helmets, gloves, boots, pants and jackets.
Snyder Volunteer Fire Department – $25,000 – To provide updated Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for 10 volunteer firefighters, including boots, helmets, bunker pants and jackets, gloves and Nomex hoods. Burns Flat-Dill City Public Schools – $4,951. 72 – To expand beginning band classes with essential instruments and curriculum.
Cement Public Schools – $5,000 – For Family and Consumer Sciences courses to teach diverse recipes and traditions, giving students hands-on experiences that build confidence, broaden cultural perspectives and strengthen practical skills.
Frederick Public Schools – $5,000 – To equip both the high school and the new middle school jazz bands with trumpets, trombones, saxophones, guitars and amps, removing cost barriers for low-income students. Lone Wolf Public Schools – $1,200 – For students to attend an Oklahoma City Philharmonic youth concert and explore the Oklahoma Art Museum’s Dale Chihuly glass exhibit.
Medicine Park Aquarium & Natural Sciences Center – $5,000 – To create the Medicine Park Aquarium Interactive Classroom so students can explore natural science through aquarium visits, interactive classes and animal feedings. Sentinel Public Schools – $5,000 – For a musical theatre stage production & outdoor classroom that blends natural acoustics with performance-based learning.
Tipton Public Schools – $4,609 – For students to explore Oklahoma’s art and history through museum visits, hands-on art projects and project-based lessons. Tishomingo Public Schools – $5,000 – To support elementary students building puppets and learning storytelling through workshops with artist G. Patrick Riley.
Tupelo Public Schools – $5,000 – For a hands-on clay & ceramics experience for rural students so they can create functional and artistic pieces, then present their work in gallery-style exhibitions.
Tupelo Public Schools – $1,674 – For a program that teaches students etiquette, civility and conflict resolution through journals, role-play and a formal dining experience that prepares students for success at home, school and in public life. Wetumka Public Schools – $3,790 – For a program blending theatre and technology, audio engineering, digital storytelling, set design and video editing with professional-grade equipment.
Burns Flat-Dill City Public Schools – $2,000 – To expand the elementary library with durable hardback books, completing series and adding new titles otherwise out of reach. Whitefield Public School – $4,999. 97 – To expand classroom libraries with diverse, high-quality literature reflecting varied cultures and experiences that deepen comprehension and spark discussion.
Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) Burns Flat-Dill City Public Schools – $5,000 For a four-year STEM curriculum that will immerse high school students in electricity, robotics, engineering, magnetism and cross-disciplinary studies like architecture, biology and astronomy. Carnegie Public Schools – $4,943.
43 – To implement a nationally recognized agricultural science program that integrates STEM concepts through hands-on, inquiry-based learning in areas like plant science, food systems and natural resources. Fort Towson Public Schools – $4,300 – For Camp Goddard, which immerses 6th graders in four days of hands-on learning through hiking trails, a natural history museum and team-building activities.
Fort Towson Public Schools – $4,650 – To teach 6th graders coding, circuits, robotics and engineering challenges that foster collaboration and critical thinking. Hollis Public School District – $2,600 – For students to gain hands-on skills in culinary arts, childcare, financial literacy and entrepreneurship, connecting academics to practical life and community experiences. Hugo Public Schools – $3,045.
95 – For a forensic science and law enforcement career curriculum for students to practice mock fingerprinting, blood and hair analysis, ballistics, and drug detection, which integrates STEM and practical applications. Maryetta Public Schools – $2,960.
35 – For the Generation Genius program, which creates engaging, standards-aligned math and science lessons paired with hands-on projects like modeling ecosystems and running a student sticker business. Mountain View Gotebo Public Schools – $5,000 – For an agricultural curriculum with hands-on lab kits and sensors so students can apply physics, chemistry and electrical science concepts and collect data for math integration.
Moyers Public Schools – $3,500 – For an agricultural program that uses power tools to construct benches, bucket gardens and future large-scale projects that prepare students for real-world problem-solving and career pathways. Moyers Public Schools – $5,000 – For students to design, plant and maintain a greenhouse, transforming it into a living laboratory.
Navajo Public Schools – $5,000 – To build a rainwater harvesting system for the Navajo Outdoor Classroom that connects gardens and a greenhouse. Smithville Public Schools – $5,000 – To transform a middle-school classroom into a sensory-friendly learning space, integrating academics, life skills, vocational training and behavior support for students with autism and disabilities.
Spiro Public Schools – $5,000 – For a year-long honeybee outdoor project where students manage an observation hive and pollinator garden, learning beekeeping, data collection and hive sustainability. Tishomingo Public Schools – $2,298.
65 – For a middle-school entrepreneurship program using games, team projects and Reality Works curriculum where students design businesses, create posters and pitch ideas during “Young Entrepreneurship Day.
” Tushka Public Schools – $5,000 – For a forensic science and criminal justice technology program where students investigate mock crime scenes using 3D documentation and virtual reality walk-throughs, allowing immersive reconstructions for evidence analysis. Westville Public Schools – $2,500 – To equip students with cross-disciplinary science tools for experiments, research and student-led projects.
Gore Public Schools – $5,000 – For high-school seniors to travel to Washington, D. C. , and visit Arlington Cemetery, the Capitol, White House, Smithsonian museums and monuments.
Roland Public Schools – $4,425 – To equip classrooms with projectors and curated historical footage, allowing students to study presidential speeches, civil rights marches and wartime newsreels. Atoka High School – $3,820 – To support the humanities class, which introduces students to international artists and various aspects of painting, music and cultural exploration.
Burns Flat Dill City – $4,330 – To support their Colorful Capers program where elementary students collaborate with high school English and art students to create graphic novels. Carnegie Public Schools – $4,285 – To provide a hands-on history lesson on printmaking, from its origins in ancient China to its evolution with artists like Dürer, Picasso and Matisse compared to present day technology.
Eufaula Public Schools – $5,000 – To develop a comprehensive speech and drama curriculum. Hugo Elementary School – $3,920 – To support the school’s Artful Explorers program, which will integrate science and social-emotional learning with learning art techniques. Marble City Public School – $5,000 – To deepen students’ understanding of visual arts by connecting them to local history, indigenous culture and contemporary art.
Mountain View-Gotebo – $4,193 – To replace photography equipment for the yearbook staff and ag communications class. Smithville High School – $4,836 – To continue the school’s 80+ year tradition of creating a school yearbook while enhancing students’ skills in journalism, photography and art. Smithville High School – $4,300 – For their I Designed That!
program where students explore artistic design, digital art and career opportunities in clothing design and marketing. Smithville Public School – $4,770 – To support the school’s new speech class, which will develop and perform monologues, plays and poetry for the student body and community.
Tipton Public Schools – $3,900 – To support their Exploring the Arts in Humanities program, which combines art classes with visits to cultural and historical sites. Tishomingo Public Schools – $5,000 – To create stop-motion animated videos and provide music, dance and media instruction in collaboration with teaching artist Austin Hartel.
Tupelo Elementary School – $2,220 – To support a 12-week etiquette course that teaches students essential manners and social skills for the home, school and community. Tushka High School – $3,100 – To support a project integrating abstract painting with architectural and interior design. Weleetka Public Schools – $4,000 – To support set construction, costumes and performance materials for the school’s production of “Frozen.
” Caddo Public Schools – $2,692 – To support a comprehensive, multisensory therapy system that targets reading and math intervention for students with dyslexia and dyscalculia aged 14 and up. Hanna Public School – $4,912 – To increase daily reading practice for students by providing access to engaging books across various genres.
Hugo Public Schools – $2,000 – To support reading reward field trips designed to motivate students to read and enhance literacy skills. Lookeba-Sickles Public School – $2,500 – To support the use of SRA Reading Labs to offer self-paced, high-interest stories that help improve literacy for students who struggle with grade-level reading.
Norwood Elementary – $5,000 – For their Being a Reader and Writer project that combines print and digital materials to enhance literacy for elementary age students. Shady Grove School – $2,244 – To provide students with books and interactive games at various reading levels to improve fluency and provide support for special needs students.
Westville Public Schools – $825 – To support a Holocaust remembrance project that will explore the historical context, causes and consequences. Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) Antlers High School – $4,500 – To provide students hands-on experience in horticulture by setting up and managing a Hydramax Hydroponics system.
Boone-Apache Elementary – $3,988 – To introduce students to coding, circuits, engineering and simple computations. Boone-Apache Public School – $3,400 – To teach students basic computer coding by creating patterns that direct the movements of a small robot. Carnegie High School – $2,272 – To support technology in the biology lab that explores cellular functions like respiration and photosynthesis.
Carnegie Public Schools – $2,800 – To support hands-on learning about erosion, focusing on how streams, rivers and deltas impact land. Colbert Public School – $1,000 – To support Kidvation Global, a project that empowers students to develop innovative products to solve real-world problems. Clayton Public School – $5,000 – To enhance physical science and chemistry learning through hands-on labs and experiments.
Hinton Schools – $2,593 – To support the 3 rd and 4 th grade STEM program focusing on space exploration, including a trip to Science Museum Oklahoma. Hollis Public Schools – $3,400 – To provide students with hands-on experience, learning the ins and outs of reporting, storytelling and the equipment needed.
McCall Middle School – $1,577 – To allow students to explore digital marketing, podcasting, photography and videography as they create a podcast and newsletter. Medicine Park Aquarium + Ft. Cobb-Broxton, Carnegie and Lookeba-Sickles – $2,895 – To provide an immersive learning experience at a natural science facility, featuring two interactive science classes and animal feeding activities.
Milburn Elementary – $2,500 – To engage elementary students in hands-on STEM activities that explore concepts such as physics, engineering and coding. Milburn Public School – $4,472 – To introduce LEGO Spike Prime sets, providing students with hands-on experiences that develop critical thinking and problem-solving skills.
Mountain View-Gotebo – $5,000 – To introduce an aquaponics system, combining aquaculture and hydroponics and offering valuable hands-on experiences that extend beyond traditional classroom learning. Olustee-Eldorado Public Schools – $3,498 – To provide hands-on learning opportunities using an aeroponics system to grow plants indoors without soil.
Sallie Gillentine Elementary – $4,225 – To provide students with computer science curriculum and manipulatives like pattern blocks, circuit kits and robot builders to learn algorithms and sequences. Tipton Public Schools – $4,979 – To support programming for middle school classrooms where students can explore coding, engineering and robotics.
Tishomingo Elementary School – $5,000 – To teach students drone operation while exploring potential future careers in coding, drone technology, crisis prevention and videography. Tupelo Elementary School – $575 – To support hands-on, in-depth exploration of natural disasters such as volcanoes, tornadoes and earthquakes.
Tuskahoma Public School – $5,000 – To support Project Lead The Way (PLTW) Flight and Space curriculum, offering hands-on learning experiences in aerospace and 3D printing. Maryetta School – $1,093 – To provide a series of social studies projects that teach about the 50 states, the voting experience and economic supply and demand.
deadCenter Film – $15,000 – To support a rural tour offering film education and career exploration activities for middle, high school and technology center students. General Tommy Franks Leadership Institute and Museum – $10,000 – To support a roadshow and mobile classroom project inspired by General Tommy Franks’ leadership and his post-9/11 role, allowing students to explore cultural aspects of more than 25 countries.
Latimer County Arts Council – $8,000 – To provide a live theatre experience to the community with a full-scale musical production of The Wizard of Oz . Oklahoma Historical Society – $10,000 – To support the Fort Towson Historic Site’s annual youth history camp and a garment closet with authentic, period-specific attire.
Oklahoma Museums Association – $10,000 – To support scholarships for rural museum staff and board members to attend the 2024 Museum Conference in Idabel. Oklahoma State University Foundation – $20,000 – To increase access to cultural and civic information for Indigenous communities, building on KOSU’s Indigenous Affairs reporting.
Oklahoma Visual Arts Coalition – $20,000 – To support arts & culture summits that will connect rural artists with wide-ranging resources at the local, regional and state level. Woody Guthrie Coalition – $2,000 – To support a creative writing workshop during the 2024 WoodyFest in Okemah that will explore Woody Guthrie’s music and lyrics.
Oklahoma Council on Economic Education – $15,000 – To support specialized training, workshops and resources for rural Oklahoma teachers focusing on personal finance, entrepreneurship, economics and innovative teaching methods. Rural Enterprises of Oklahoma – $20,000 – To support access to training, counseling, capital and technical assistance for rural entrepreneurs and business owners.
Boggy Volunteer Fire Department – $30,000 – To support necessary facility updates to boost efficiency in emergencies, provide a conducive learning environment for training and improve the department’s ISO rating, lowering the community’s home insurance premiums.
Choctaw County Ambulance Authority – $30,000 – To support a training conference offering free education and continuing education credits for EMS personnel in Choctaw, Pushmataha, McCurtain, Bryan, Atoka and Marshall counties. City of Hugo – $20,000 – To enhance fire safety and education to align with state and national objectives to help reduce fire hazards.
Hamilton Health Box Foundation – $30,000 – To help launch rural primary care microclinics utilizing a hybrid in-person and telehealth model to serve underserved rural populations. Kiamichi Economic Development District of Oklahoma – $40,000 – To support a mobility management program in southeast Oklahoma to improve service accessibility and efficiency for rural citizens.
LIFT Community Action Agency – $5,000 – To help expand RSVP’s healthy futures focus, providing preventative health screenings, education for healthy living and access to health resources, insurance and services. Oklahoma Dental Foundation – $30,000 – To support dental treatment and education in rural areas through the MobileSmiles program.
Southern Oklahoma Development Association – $20,000 – To help improve mobility for rural citizens, seniors and individuals with disabilities by expanding transportation options. SRT, Incorporated – $13,000 – To support a biannual training for Community Support Networks covering suicide and mental health awareness, recognizing crises in children and teens, and developing a trauma-informed lens.
Swink Volunteer Fire Department – $30,000 – To equip the Swink volunteer fire department with essential tools and training for vehicle extrication. Tinker Federal Credit Union Foundation – $8,715 – A partnership between TFCU and the Watson Foundation to replace the Antlers Fire Department’s outdated bunker gear.
Tinker Federal Credit Union Foundation – $4,680 – A partnership between TFCU and the Watson Foundation to replace the Idabel Police Department’s expired ballistic vests. Warrior’s Rest Foundation – $20,000 – To train first responders in rural Oklahoma to form multi-disciplinary peer support teams, offering mental health support among colleagues.
Adair County Imagination Library – $5,000 – To support the library’s Dolly Parton Imagination Library that provides age-appropriate books to children. Cartwright Community Resource Center – $15,000 – To provide free GED classes, books and testing as well as information sessions and on-site teacher support.
Cartwright Memorial Library – $6,500 – To establish tutoring programs with a reading specialist and college math tutor to address student needs in reading, math and GED preparation. City of Okemah Public Library – $15,000 – To launch educational programs that focus on adult education, summer tutoring for elementary and middle school students and homesteading classes for local residents.
Friends of the Wilburton Library Association – $2,500 – To support the library’s Dolly Parton Imagination Library program that provides free books to children monthly. Reach Out and Read – $15,000 – To provide books and programmatic support for early childhood interventions during well-child visits in rural Oklahoma counties.
Battiest Elementary School – $5,000 – To support an elementary art and music program that introduces students to famous artists, traditional Choctaw beadwork and musical instruments and culminates in an end-of-year art show. Granite Public Schools – $4,996 – To provide essential materials for the speech and drama team’s monthly Rise and Shine events as well as support one theater production per semester.
Hugo Elementary School – $3,751 – To implement a comprehensive art curriculum that engages students in creative projects around the principles of design while reinforcing core concepts in math and science. Ravia Schools – $550 – To purchase a magnetic erasable whiteboard on wheels for the school’s music classroom.
Tipton Public School – $2,000 – To provide students with a wide range of art supplies and introduce them to local artists through a series of art workshops. Tishomingo Elementary School – $5,000 – To support the collaboration between teaching artist Nicole Emmons and fine arts teacher Trey Hays on a project to enhance students’ storytelling and stop-motion animation skills.
Tupelo Elementary School – $1,571 – To implement an etiquette course for Tupelo elementary students. Watts Public Schools – $700 – To support the addition of weekly art and art history lessons in elementary classroom curriculum. Weleetka Public Schools – $1,500 – To help establish a drama department for upper elementary students and produce the play Peter Pan .
Will Rogers Elementary – $590 – To support their production of the musical AnnieKids . Antlers High School – $2,500 – To combine literacy with mentorship by pairing seniors with second-grade students to create custom-written, illustrated and constructed children’s books. Antlers High School – $2,000 – To acquire class sets of contemporary and classic novels for use in student-led book circles and class-wide novel studies.
Apache Elementary School – $4,985 – To implement indoor and outdoor sensory pathways that offer active, engaging experiences for students to practice recursive skills that are often addressed through flashcards and worksheets. Colbert Eastward Elementary – $2,000 – To enrich classroom libraries with new books that align with lessons and match student interests.
Mannsville Elementary School – $3,689 – To address the urgent need for a reading intervention classroom at Mannsville Elementary School where a significant number of students require support through Response to Intervention plans. Milburn Elementary School – $5,000 – To support their Start Right program that uses Start Right Readers and an interactive board to reinforce weekly curriculum and enhance the teaching process.
Norwood Elementary – $5,000 – To purchase the Being a Reader program for 3-5 grade students to help create a comprehensive ELA curriculum and enhance K-5 English language arts curriculum. Rattan Elementary – $3,699 – To implement the Frog Street Pre-K Curriculum, an interactive educational program that encompasses ten learning domains, including literacy, math and social-emotional development.
Shady Grove School – $3,739 – To enhance children’s language and literacy development through dramatic play and storytelling props. Apache Elementary – $2,000 – To purchase new books that align with the emergent reader level to allow students to develop early reading skills. Colbert Eastward School – $1,033 – To expand the classroom library by adding more accelerated readers to accommodate the diverse range of student reading levels.
Hollis Public Schools – $3,500 – To provide level-appropriate books for the classroom and implement the accelerated reader program. Science, Technology, Engineering & Math (STEM) Agriculture & Sustainable Farming Bennington High School – $5,000 – To engage students in the science of chicken embryology by tracking the development of eggs from fertilization to hatching.
Blair Public School – $5,000 – To purchase greenhouse heaters and other year-round supplies to help revitalize the school’s greenhouse and enhance STEM activities in horticulture and botany. Boone-Apache Public Schools – $2,260 – To introduce hands-on agricultural learning by observing and caring for chickens from hatching to the production of eggs or meat.
Carnegie High School – $5,000 – To acquire a greenhouse for the Carnegie Agricultural Education program. Eufaula Public Schools – $4,816 – To set up an indoor aquaponics grow system that will offer students hands-on experience in indoor food production. Tushka High School – $3,500 – To enhance the school’s existing greenhouse curriculum by introducing a hydroponics system.
Wapanucka High School – $4,000 – To employ hydroponics to enhance students’ agricultural, math, science and life skills. Achille High School – $5,000 – To update and enhance the science lab and classroom so they can better conduct hands-on experiments and demonstrations.
Atoka High School – $4,000 – To integrate 3D printing and interactive models into biology, zoology, chemistry and physical science curriculum to offer students tactile and visual representation of complex concepts. Caney Public School – $3,025 – To reintroduce quilting as a tool to enhance students’ math skills, particularly in the areas of measurement and fractions, as well as revive the art of quilting.
Gans High School – $5,000 – To implement a hands-on research program that involves students in quail research and the study of aquatic insects and trout behavior. Maryetta School – $2,000 – To implement a project-based learning activity that focuses on teaching students about the force of wind and how sail shape and size influence the capture and transformation of wind energy.
McCall Middle School – $4,544 – To implement STEM lessons for middle school students that allow them to explore STEM concepts and apply their knowledge to hands-on projects. Shady Grove School – $1,570 – To pair 4 th and 8 th -grade students on interactive science projects that cover motion and
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Nonprofit organizations and local government entities in rural Oklahoma, operating in areas with populations under 6,000 in specific counties. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Applications for Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation Grants are due May 1, 2027. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation Grants is funded by Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Oklahoma. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
The Homeless Youth Program is a grant from the Illinois Department of Human Services that funds services for homeless and at-risk youth across Illinois. Administered through the Office of Community and Positive Youth Development, it supports nonprofit organizations delivering shelter, outreach, and support services to young people experiencing homelessness or housing instability. Eligible applicants are Illinois-based nonprofits with demonstrated capacity to serve youth. Awards range from $100,000 to $800,000 per year under CSFA number 444-80-0711. This is a FY 2026 funding opportunity with an application deadline of May 21, 2025.
Community Investment Tax Credit Program (CITC) is a grant from the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development that provides state tax credit allocations to 501(c)(3) nonprofits, enabling them to attract private donations from individuals and businesses. Donors contributing $500 or more to approved projects receive tax credits equal to 50% of their contribution. The program has leveraged nearly $27 million in charitable contributions to approximately 700 projects statewide. Eligible project areas include education, housing, job training, arts and culture, economic development, and services for at-risk populations. Projects must be located in or serve residents of Maryland's Priority Funding Areas. The application period is typically held annually.
The Families First Community Grant Program is a competitive grant initiative from the Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS) offering approximately $27 million in funding to support nonprofit organizations serving low-income Tennessee families. Grants fund programs across four priority areas: education, health, economic stability, and family well-being, aligned with TANF goals of promoting self-sufficiency. Eligible applicants are 501(c)(3) nonprofits based in Tennessee that provide direct services to economically disadvantaged families. The 2025 application cycle closed July 10, 2025. This program reflects Tennessee's broader commitment to strengthening communities through strategic investment in local organizations that address the root causes of poverty.
HRSA's brand-new Rural Hospital Provider Assistance Program splits $24.75M among eligible rural hospitals with 50 or fewer beds and a Medicare wage index under 0.90. It's not scored competitively — every eligible hospital that applies by July 27 gets a roughly equal share. Here's how the three eligibility numbers work and why registration, not narrative, is the real risk.
Read articleRoundhouse funds rural Oregon and Tribal communities exclusively, across arts, education, environmental stewardship, and social services. Its Spring 2026 Open Call alone moved $1.6M to 125 organizations. The Fall Open Call runs June 10 to August 14, 2026. Here is how a place-based family foundation actually evaluates applicants — and how rural nonprofits should approach it.
Read articleHUD announced the FY25 Rural Capacity Building NOFO on May 18, 2026 with a July 6 deadline. Section 4 has three statutory intermediaries — Enterprise, LISC, and Habitat. RCB is a different door, and most rural housing nonprofits are misreading which one they qualify for.
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