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Find similar grantsEarly Literacy Consortium Grant is sponsored by Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Funds partnerships between eligible sponsoring organizations and PK–12 districts to promote improved teacher preparation and development in evidence-based early literacy instruction in Massachusetts.
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FY2026 Fund Code 0726: Early Literacy Consortium Grant - Grants and Other Financial Assistance Programs Grants and Other Financial Assistance Programs Educational Collaboratives Department of Elementary and Secondary Education DESE Budget Inter-District School Choice School Finance Regulations Chapter 74 Nonresident Tuition FY2026: Early Literacy Consortium Grant The purpose of this competitive grant program is to fund the development, launch, and continuation of partnerships between eligible sponsoring organizations and PK–12 districts to promote improved teacher preparation and development in evidence-based early literacy instruction and improved early literacy outcomes for PK–3 students.
All students deserve access to high quality instruction, and it will take collaborative and innovative efforts on the part of both districts and educator preparation programs to ensure that PK–3 educators have the pre-service training as well as the ongoing professional development needed to well-serve Massachusetts students.
The goal of this grant program is for both districts and sponsoring organizations to benefit from collaboration through multi-year consortia developed to impact early literacy teaching and learning through preparation of candidates and ultimately hiring and employment of effective Elementary, Early Childhood, and Moderate Disabilities PK–2/PK–8 teachers.
DESE seeks to award Early Literacy Consortium grants to entities that: Are committed to prioritizing literacy equity and excellence, and want to collaborate with districts and sponsoring organizations in their region to make this a reality Demonstrate favorable conditions and the resources, including time and commitment, necessary to make and sustain meaningful partnerships that have the potential to improve student outcomes in early literacy Bring together a diverse coalition of stakeholders committed to the activities articulated in the grant proposal, including but not limited to classroom educators, PK–12 administrators, higher education faculty and leadership, program supervisors, teacher candidates, and students where appropriate Are actively investing in equity, inclusion, and culturally and linguistically sustaining literacy practices for all learners Competitive priority will be given to: Partnerships established in FY23, FY24, or FY25 that have a proven track record with DESE of working towards the grant's priorities and goals Partnerships that include districts that have implemented or will be implementing high quality instructional materials for early literacy instruction Limited to early literacy curricular materials that are rated "Partially Meets Expectations" or "Meets Expectations" on CURATE at the time of application.
Additionally, if the district's core instructional materials do not include a foundational skills component, but does meet the criterion listed above, evidence-based foundational skills curricular materials must be in use in as well. Partnerships that include districts with systems and structures in place to run a Multi-tiered System of Support (MTSS) for early literacy in grades PK–3.
Partnerships that include districts and schools in chronically underperforming status and the Strategic Transformation Region Partnerships whose action plan explicitly addresses training and support for program supervisors and/or supervising practitioners responsible for overseeing Elementary, Early Childhood, or Moderate Disabilities teacher candidate's field-based experiences Priority will be given to districts and schools in the strategic transformation region.
For the purposes of this grant, an "applicant" is defined as the organization (Local Education Agency or sponsoring organization) who is applying for the grant on behalf of a "consortium," defined as a group of organizations working together to improve early literacy teaching and learning.
Category 1 — Districts or Sponsoring Organizations in the Visioning Stage of Launching a Consortium Applicants in this category are at the very beginning stages of planning and have not firmly established multiple partnerships.
To be eligible, an applicant must represent a consortium that includes: At least one public school district At least one sponsoring organization that has an approved Early Childhood PK–2, Elementary 1–6, or Moderate Disabilities PK–2/PK–8 licensure program ( List of sponsoring organizations with relevant programs ) Outreach with other potential partners with the goal of building a regional consortium that includes at least four organizations Convening all partners at least once before June 30, 2026.
Regular touchpoint meetings with DESE staff Category 2 — Newly Established Consortia in the Planning Stage of Launching Early Literacy Programming Applicants in this category have an established partnership with multiple sponsoring organizations and public school districts (four or more organizations in total) in their region and are designing and planning to implement programming that will advance effective early literacy instruction.
To be eligible, an applicant must represent a consortium that includes: At least two school districts At least two sponsoring organizations that have an approved Early Childhood PK–2, Elementary 1–6, or Moderate Disabilities PK–2/PK–8 licensure program ( List of sponsoring organizations with relevant programs ) Convening all partners at least twice before June 30, 2026 Regular touchpoint meetings with DESE staff Category 3 — Established Consortia Implementing Early Literacy Programming At least two school districts At least two sponsoring organizations that have an approved Early Childhood PK–2, Elementary 1–6, or Moderate Disabilities PK–2/PK–8 licensure program ( List of sponsoring organizations with relevant programs ) A description of the consortium's mission An outline of the consortium's scope of work to date Convening all partners at least twice before June 30, 2026 Sharing outcomes of conventions and plans for the consortium's future work Regular touchpoint meetings with DESE staff A total of approximately $800,000 is projected to be available across FY26 (Upon approval through 6/30/2026) based on the number of quality proposals submitted and the total cost of the grant activities.
Category 1 applicants may apply for up to $10,000 total. Category 2 applicants may apply for up to $30,000 total. Category 3 applicants may apply for $100,000 to $200,000 total.
Funding will be awarded based on the proposed grant activities and budget presented in the application. Pending appropriation, funding for grant may continue in Fiscal Years 2027, 2028, and 2029 for FC 0726. This RFP is the governing document for these grant funds.
Funding is contingent upon availability. All dollar amounts listed are estimated/approximate and are subject to change. If more funding becomes available, it will be distributed under the same guidelines that appear in this RFP document.
State Line Item 7010-0033 Grant awards under this program are contingent upon the municipality being able to certify that it will comply with all applicable laws, including the Massachusetts General Laws. If the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities has determined that a district is out of compliance with G. L.
c. 40A, § 3A, the MBTA Communities Act, the district is not eligible to participate in FC 0726 until they are able to remediate this noncompliance. Funding will be distributed across three categories (applicants developing a consortium, applicants launching a consortium, and applicants continuing a consortium), and eligibility requirements are set accordingly.
Some grant funds will go toward development of consortia, and therefore may be awarded to single organizations (e.g., a PK–12 district, sponsoring organization, or other legal entity) committed to networking and establishing partnerships with other organizations in service of improved early literacy teaching and learning.
Some grant funds will be awarded to established consortia committed to launching early literacy initiatives across partnering districts and sponsoring organizations. Other grant funds will be awarded to established consortia committed to continuing early literacy initiatives across partnering districts and sponsoring organizations.
The intent is for this to be multi-year grant program designed to support consortia at various stages of development.
Funds must be used to support the costs of grant activities including staff salaries, stipends, staff planning time as it relates to the grant, contracts, high quality instructional materials, costs related to professional development and training activities, and other expenses associated with implementing grant funded programming.
Grant activities may include but are not limited to: Professional Development Activities (e.g. professional development or professional learning communities for supervising practitioners, program supervisors, educator preparation faculty, and district instructional leaders to improve the quality of teacher candidates' preparation in early literacy instruction) Early Literacy Initiatives (e.g., high-dosage early literacy tutoring program for PK–3 students; the development of a resource library to support teacher candidates' understanding of evidence-based, culturally and linguistically sustaining early literacy instruction; an Early Literacy Task Force focused on building systems to support innovative staffing models; implementation of the Early Literacy Observation Tool) Other (a model proposed by the applicant for collaboration that meets the needs of districts and sponsoring organizations) Unallowable Expenditures: Out-of-State travel, food, current transportation costs or other currently funded costs, or any expenditures not directly related to grant activities.
School Year: FY2026: Upon Approval (No Earlier than 7/1/2025)* through 6/30/2026 Pending appropriation, funding for grant may continue in Fiscal Years 2027, 2028, and 2029 for FC 0726. Important Note: all FY26 grant funded goods and/or services must be provided and/or received by June 30, 2026.
* Grant start date cannot be prior to DESE receiving a substantially approvable Application Submission as directed in this RFP's Submission Instructions. Goods and Services cannot be procured prior to Grants receiving and approving an application submission. Funds cannot exceed the project duration end date.
Office of Educator Effectiveness, Center for Instructional Support Friday, June 20, 2025 5:00 p. m. ** Complete proposals must be received at the Department by 5:00 p.
m. on the date due. Confirmation of receipt will be sent.
** Competitive grant applications are considered submitted when the grant application is submitted by the Superintendent or their designee through the "LEA Superintendent / Chief Executive Approved" step in GEM$. In order to be considered for competitive funding, applicants must submit a grant application through the LEA Superintendent Approved stage by the due date and time listed in the RFP.
All responses must be submitted through the proper steps and received by the due date/time listed above. Failure to do so will result in disqualification. Responses not received on time will not be reviewed.
Applicants applying after the due date may be notified their application was received late and will not be reviewed. Applications must be submitted as directed in the Submissions Instructions below. Failure to do so may result in disqualification.
If you need assistance with submitting your application, please reach out to the contact person listed on this funding opportunity. Please submit questions to Siobhan. m.
allen@mass. gov by May 30, 2025. Responses will be posted to the Early Literacy in Educator Preparation website by 5:00 pm on June 2, 2025.
Information Sessions on this RFP will be held via Zoom: Thursday, May 22, 2025 from 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM | Registration for Zoom Meeting Tuesday , May 27, 2025 from 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM | Registration for Zoom Meeting Friday, May 30, 2025 from 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM | Registration for Zoom Meeting Curriculum Data Collection: In order to be eligible for this grant, districts must have completed their LEA's Curriculum Data Collection.
The data should be viewable and up to date at: Curriculum Data . Directions about the expectations and how to provide the data can be found at: Curriculum Data Collection .
Universal Screening Data Sharing LEAs receiving this award will be required to participate in research efforts, including providing student-level assessment data from the approved early literacy screening assessment that is administered in all schools during the award period. DESE will request that data be submitted by June 30 of each year awarded.
DESE will analyze the data collected for research purposes, including evaluation of this program. Analyses will comply with state and federal confidentiality laws. GEM$ Submission Instructions: The FY26 FC 0726 will be submitted in our new GEM$ system .
GEM$ is a cloud-based fiscal and program management grant system that will eventually phase out the use of EdGrants. Grants for Education Management System (GEM$) New organizations that do not have an established LEA with DESE skip to Step 3. Step 1: Establish and assign proper roles before the grant due date/time.
Grant Submission at the LEA level requires roles to be established for Grant writer for the specific fund code, LEA fiscal for financial review/approval, and Superintendent/Chief Executive sign off. All roles should be established prior to the grant due date and all appropriate forms should be either uploaded to GEM$, maintained at the LEA level or sent in to the DESE RFP contact as described on the individual forms.
The user guidance documents and forms are found on the GEM$ homepage under DESE Resources. These forms can be accessed without logging in to the system. Step 2: Submit the grant through all LEA steps in GEM$.
There are three LEA steps a competitive grant must be submitted through by the due date and time to be considered for funding: LEA Fiscal Representative Approved LEA Superintendent / Chief Executive Approved Competitive grant applications are considered submitted once the grant application is submitted by the Superintendent or their designee through the "LEA Superintendent / Chief Executive Approved" step in GEM$.
In order to be considered for competitive funding, applicants must submit a grant application through the LEA Superintendent Approved stage by the due date and time listed in the RFP. Please plan accordingly. The Superintendent / Chief Executive Approved Step allows for the organization lead to review and approve the grant application.
Removing the requirement for the Part I Standard Contract Form, this step signifies Superintendent /Chief Executive sign off. Any grant budget changes requiring signature, will re-execute this step when amended signifying the organization lead is approving these changes. Step 3: (If applicable) New organizations request temporary organization access.
New organizations are entities that have not been established as an LEA in GEM$. Entities that do not have an organization in GEM$ must contact the DESE Program Unit issuing this grant at a minimum 5 business days prior to the grant due date for temporary organization access. Temporary Access will need to be created by DESE before you can then assign the proper roles and submit the grant as outlined in Steps 1 and 2.
Failure to provide DESE with GEM$ Temp Organization Access Request at least 5 business days prior to the due date may result in not meeting the submission due date listed above. DESE cannot accept or review applications after the due date. Last Updated: May 15, 2025 This link will take you to an external website which may or may not be accessible and WCAG 2.
1 compliant
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Eligible sponsoring organizations and PK–12 districts in Massachusetts. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Varies Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Improving Undergraduate STEM Education: Education & Human Resources (IUSE: EHR) Program is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). This program promotes novel, creative, and transformative approaches to generating and using new knowledge about STEM teaching and learning to improve STEM education for undergraduate students. It supports projects that bring recent advances in STEM knowledge into undergraduate education, adapt, improve, and incorporate evidence-based practices, and lay the groundwork for institutional improvement in STEM education. Professional development for instructors to ensure adoption of new and effective pedagogical techniques is a potential topic of interest.
The National Leadership Grants for Libraries Program (NLG-L) supports projects that address critical needs of the library and archives fields and have the potential to advance practice and strengthen library and archival services for the American public. Successful proposals will generate results such as new models, tools, research findings, services, practices, and/or alliances that can be widely used, adapted, scaled, or replicated to extend and leverage the benefits of federal investment. Applications to IMLS should both advance knowledge and understanding and ensure that the federal investment made generates benefits to society. Specifically, the goals for this program are to generate projects of far-reaching impact that: • Build the workforce and institutional capacity for managing the national information infrastructure and serving the information and education needs of the public. • Build the capacity of libraries and archives to lead and contribute to efforts that improve community well-being and strengthen civic engagement. • Improve the ability of libraries and archives to provide broad access to and use of information and collections with emphasis on collaboration to avoid duplication and maximize reach. • Strengthen the ability of libraries to provide services to affected communities in the event of an emergency or disaster. • Strengthen the ability of libraries, archives, and museums to work collaboratively for the benefit of the communities they serve. Throughout its work, IMLS places importance on diversity, equity, and inclusion. This may be reflected in an IMLS-funded project in a wide range of ways, including efforts to serve individuals of diverse geographic, cultural, and socioeconomic backgrounds; individuals with disabilities; individuals with limited functional literacy or information skills; individuals having difficulty using a library or museum; and underserved urban and rural communities, including children from families with incomes below the poverty line. Application Process: The application process for the NLG-L program has two phases; applicants must begin by applying for Phase I. For Phase I, all applicants must submit Preliminary Proposals by the September 20th deadline listed for this Notice of Funding Opportunity. For Phase II, only selected applicants will be invited to submit Full Proposals, and only those Invited Full Proposals will be considered for funding. Invited Full Proposals will be due March 20, 2024. Funding Opportunity Number: NLG-LIBRARIES-FY24. Assistance Listing: 45.312. Funding Instrument: G. Category: AR,HU. Award Amount: $50K – $1M per award.
The California Department of Education (CDE) Early Education Division is making approximately .7 million available to expand California State Preschool Program (CSPP) services statewide, appropriated under the 2021 Budget Act. Eligible applicants are local educational agencies (LEAs), including school districts, county offices of education, community college districts, and direct-funded charter schools—both current CSPP contractors and new applicants. Funding supports full-day/full-year or part-day/part-year preschool services for income-eligible children beginning in FY 2024–25. Awards are allocated by county based on Local Planning Council priority areas and application scores, with redistribution provisions if county allocations are underutilized.