1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Educational Technology, Media, and Materials for Individuals with Disabilities Program—Accessible Education Video Projects is sponsored by U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services.
This program provides competitive grants for projects that promote the development, demonstration, and use of technology; support educational activities of value in the classroom for children with disabilities; provide support for captioning and video description; and provide accessible educational materials. The FY 2026 competition includes an absolute priority for Accessible Education Video Projects.
Public school districts are eligible applicants.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: State educational agencies, local educational agencies (LEAs), including public charter schools that are considered LEAs under State law, institutions of higher education, other public agencies, private nonprofit organizations, freely associated States and outlying areas, Indian Tribes or Tribal organizations, and for-profit organizations. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $1,050,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Applications for Educational Technology, Media, and Materials for Individuals with Disabilities Program—Accessible Education Video Projects are due June 26, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Educational Technology, Media, and Materials for Individuals with Disabilities Program—Accessible Education Video Projects is funded by U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
National Center for Accessible Education Videos is sponsored by U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (OSERS), Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP). The purpose of this program is to improve results for children with disabilities by (1) promoting the development, demonstration, and use of technology; (2) supporting educational activities designed to be of educational value in the classroom for students with disabilities; (3)…
Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (OSERS): Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP): National Center for Accessible Education Videos is sponsored by U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (OSERS). The purpose of this program, under the Educational Technology, Media, and Materials for Individuals with Disabilities Program, is to improve results for children with disabilities by promoting the development, demonstration, and use of technology; supporting educational activities; providing support for captioning and video description; and providing accessible educational materials.
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.
NSF'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.
Read articleNSF 26-507 establishes a new $8.5M K-12 AI education research-to-prototype pipeline with 50 Planning grants ($50K, 2 months) feeding 20 Development grants ($300K, 1 year). The mandatory team composition — K-12 educators, technologists, researchers, and parents/guardians — is a structural break from how NSF has historically funded education research.
Read article