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Google Team Support Grant is a grant from Google that provides financial support to FIRST Tech Challenge (FTC) teams in Georgia. Rookie teams can receive $2,600 in funding, while returning teams are also eligible for support grants. The program helps new and returning FTC teams cover startup costs, registration fees, and equipment expenses needed to participate in the robotics competition season.
Google's support for FIRST robotics programs reflects the company's broader commitment to expanding access to STEM education and engineering experiences for students. Eligible applicants are FTC teams in Georgia — both new rookie teams and returning teams — with active support from Google.
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Google Grant Application Eligibility - Google for Nonprofits What you need to know before you get started Before requesting a Google for Nonprofits account, find out if your organization qualifies, what you’ll need for verification, and what to expect. To request a Google for Nonprofits account, you must be a nonprofit charitable organization in good standing, and meet the full eligibility requirements in your country.
Please note, some types of organizations are not eligible and will not be verified.
Please confirm your organization is: Not a governmental entity or organization Not a hospital or healthcare organization Not a school, academic institution, or university ( Google for Education offers a separate program for schools) Start the verification process To get started with Google for Nonprofits , one of our verification partners will first verify your organization and your affiliation.
Request a Google for Nonprofits account Once your nonprofit is verified, we’ll let you know by email Then you can activate and use the individual products See which products are available in your country Google for Nonprofits tools available in Google Workspace for Nonprofits YouTube Nonprofit Program Request a Google for Nonprofits account Once we’ve verified your organization’s eligibility, you’ll be able to activate the Google products that best meet your needs.
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Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Georgia FTC teams, rookies and returning Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates $2,600 for rookies 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.
Google.org's $30 million global initiative funding nonprofits, social enterprises, and academic institutions partnering with governments to use generative and agentic AI to transform public services. Focus areas include health (expanding healthcare access through AI-powered service delivery), resilience (enhancing crisis preparedness, response, and recovery), and economy (improving public infrastructure and economic opportunity). Selected organizations receive multi-month Google.org Accelerator programming with dedicated technical support from Google AI experts.
The Google.org Impact Challenge: AI for Science is a $30 million global open call to fund nonprofits, social enterprises, and academic institutions using artificial intelligence to accelerate breakthroughs in health and climate science. The challenge funds organizations applying AI to two priority domains: Health and Life Sciences (drug discovery, diagnostics, epidemiology, genomics) and Climate Resilience and Environmental Science (climate modeling, biodiversity monitoring, sustainable agriculture, carbon capture). Individual grants range from $500,000 to $3 million. Beyond funding, selected organizations gain access to technical mentorship from Google AI researchers, Google Cloud computing resources, and a multi-month accelerator programme. Applications close April 17, 2026. This is part of Google.org's broader $60 million commitment to AI impact challenges in 2026, alongside the separate AI for Government Innovation challenge.
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.
Google.org is offering up to $3 million per organization across two AI challenges — one for government innovation, one for scientific breakthroughs. Eligibility, strategy, and what wins.
Read articleThe Google.org AI for Government Innovation Challenge offers $1-3M grants with an April 3 deadline. But it is part of a larger shift: tech philanthropy is becoming the R&D lab for public sector innovation.
Read articleThe Google.org Impact Challenge: AI for Government Innovation offers $1M–$3M grants plus cloud credits and engineering support. Applications close April 3. A strategic guide for nonprofits and research institutions.
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