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Find similar grantsInnovative Education Fund (Prototype/Expansion Grants) is sponsored by The Georgia Foundation for Public Education. These grants provide funding to pilot or scale innovative education programs that have the potential to impact student outcomes and transform teaching/learning practices.
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Innovative Education Fund » Grants » The Georgia Foundation for Public Education Innovative Education Fund The Innovative Education Fund (IEF) provides funding to Georgia schools and districts implementing innovative programs at various levels. The Georgia Foundation for Public Education (GFPE) defines innovative education programs as those that contribute solutions to improve outcomes for Georgia students.
The Fund is designed to provide a pathway for schools and districts to design, implement, and scale innovative programs that have the potential to transform education in their context. The Innovative Education Fund is made possible through the PEACH Education Tax Credit . Please see the full RFP here .
The GFPE defines characteristics of innovative programs as those that are: Targeting the Root Cause of a Problem Disruptive & Transformative 2026 Innovative Education Fund Grant Programs The 2026 Innovative Education Fund will feature two programs: Prototype/Expansion Grants (Available to all Georgia K-12 public schools, school districts, charter schools, and nonprofit organizations partnered with these entities) Prototype Grant: Provides $25,000-$50,000 over 12 months (one year) to pilot an innovative education program that has the potential to impact student outcomes and transform teaching/learning practices at the school or district.
Expansion Grant: Provides $25,000-$50,000 over 12 months (one year) to scale an innovative education program that has a proven track record of impacting student outcomes and transform teaching/learning practices at the school or district.
Innovation for Impact Fund (Open only to schools on the CSI/TSI lists, linked below) The Innovation for Impact Fund is a capacity-building opportunity designed specifically for schools recognized as Comprehensive Support & Improvement (CSI) and Targeted Support & Improvement (TSI) . Here is how it works: School districts identified as CSI and TSI schools are invited to apply using a commitment/capacity screening application.
Districts participate in a half-day virtual “Innovation Sprint” that helps them identify a single high-impact barrier (attendance, literacy gaps, staff burnout, etc.). Using examples of innovative programs implemented throughout the country, participants will have the opportunity to design a program to pilot based on the challenges the district is facing.
Within two weeks of the Innovation Sprint, participating schools are invited to apply for a grant of up to $30,000 to pilot their program over 12 months. GFPE will remain on standby for office hours and targeted support when needed as schools put their proposals together. Follow-up throughout implementation: GFPE will offer weekly optional office hours and mid-year check-ins for support.
Grantees will submit a final evaluation report at the end of the grant period. Prototype/Expansion Grants You are eligible to apply for a Prototype or Expansion Grant if: You are a school administrator, principal, or instructional coach at a charter school or traditional public school in the state of Georgia.
If you are a school administrator, principal, or instructional coach at a Georgia public school applying, please ensure that your district is aware of the application before submitting. You are another type of leadership-level administrator in a Georgia LEA. You are a Georgia 501(c)(3) partnering with a Georgia school or school district.
If you are a 501(c)(3) organization, you must include a Letter of Commitment from the school or district with which you are partnered. The letter must be signed by the school principal and district superintendent. Application Submission Limits Schools are limited to ONE submission per school for the Prototype and Expansion Grant.
School districts are limited to ONE submission per school for the Prototype and Expansion Grants. Georgia 501(c)(3) organizations are limited to ONE submission for the Prototype and Expansion Grants.
You are eligible for priority points if you meet one of the following criteria: You are a school/school district located in a county with a population of 35,000 or less (2 points added to your raw score) You are a current or past IEF Prototype or Expansion Grant recipient and you are seeking an Expansion Grant to scale the work you implemented with your current or past IEF Prototype or Expansion Grant to impact a neighboring district, a new school(s), or more students at the original schools (2 points added to your raw score).
Innovation for Impact Fund You are eligible to apply for the Innovation for Impact Fund if: You are a school administrator, principal, or instructional coach at a charter school or traditional public school identified on the Georgia Department of Education’s Comprehensive Support & Improvement (CSI) and Targeted Support & Improvement (TSI) lists.
If you are a school administrator, principal, or instructional coach at a Georgia public school applying, please ensure that your district is aware of the application before submitting.
You are another type of leadership-level administrator in a Georgia school district and applying on behalf of a public school identified on the Georgia Department of Education’s Comprehensive Support & Improvement (CSI) and Targeted Support & Improvement (TSI) lists.
You commit to actively participating in virtual a capacity-building, half-day Innovation Sprint, where you will have the opportunity to identify a challenge the school is facing and its root cause, as well as design a program to address the challenge. The event will be held in May.
After participation in the Innovation Sprint, you will be invited to apply for a grant of up to $30,000 to pilot a program at your school that addresses a challenge your school is facing. To participate in either of the Innovative Education Fund programs, please follow the steps below: Watch the “ Grant Writing 101” Webinar (recommended, but not required).
Watch the “Innovation 101” Webinar (recommended, but not required). Carefully review the full RFP , including the eligibility requirements, application components, and the scoring rubric for the program to which you are applying: Innovating Education Expansion Grant and Innovating Education Prototype Grant . The Innovation for Impact Fund application serves as a capacity and commitment screening.
Complete an application using the GFPE Application Portal: https://grants. gfpe. org/ The application will open in mid-February.
Submit your application online by March 16, 2026. The GFPE may invite the applicant and prospective grant team to participate in an interview with GFPE staff and board members during the weeks of March 23, 2026-March 27, 2026. Here are the expectations for Innovative Education Fund grantees: The Innovative Education Fund grant will be awarded up front.
Innovative Education Fund grantees are responsible for tracking the outcomes of the project or program. The evaluation reports are the grantee’s opportunity to share the project’s progress, outcomes, lessons learned, and best practices.
Grantees will report outcomes twice: 1) the mid-year check-in will include options for reporting from which the grantee may select (in-person/virtual visit, presentation, video, etc.); 2) the final evaluation will be a standard template submitted via Google Forms. When appropriate, representatives from the GFPE may request an in-person or virtual site visit to observe the program/project.
Grantees may also request site visits to showcase the work or if course correction is needed. Find inspiration in our past winners! In May 2024, GFPE awarded 13 Innovative Education Fund grants to Georgia schools, districts, and organizations totaling $505,005.
00. The grant program provided types of awards – the Prototype and Expansion Grants – which both provided up to $50,000 to pilot or scale innovative work, respectively. The GFPE awarded six Prototype grants and seven Expansion grants.
The grants focused on mental health tech solutions, economic literacy for kids, ELL programming, teacher recruitment, and more. In May 2023, GFPE awarded a total of $287,723 to 15 innovative programs across the state. In May 2022, the GFPE awarded six Innovative Education Fund grants totaling $90,000 to schools and districts across the state.
For questions regarding the Innovative Education Fund, please contact Jaclyn Colona at Jaclyn. colona@doe. k12.
ga. us . Innovative Education Fund Teacher Grants for Innovation Workforce for Georgia Grants “Thank you so much for the grant that helped our program to be successful...
We greatly look forward to next year and how we can expand our program to reach even more students. Again, thank you for your generous support. ” --Chandra Steele, Pike County Schools
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Georgia K-12 public schools, school districts, charter schools, and nonprofit organizations partnered with these entities. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $25,000-$50,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Innovative Education Fund (Prototype/Expansion Grants) is funded by The Georgia Foundation for Public Education. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Georgia. 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.
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.
Foundation Source's 2026 Giving Outlook shows private foundation and DAF clients distributed $1.6 billion in grants to 27,000+ recipients through September 2025 — with Education ($262M), Public/Societal Benefit ($146M), and Human Services ($139M) capturing the largest shares. The data confirms a measurable reallocation toward organizations facing federal funding gaps, with foundations loosening criteria to backfill program revenue lost to research grant terminations and Department of Education freezes. Grant writers calibrating their FY26 pipelines on 2023 foundation behavior are working off outdated assumptions.
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