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Find similar grantsTEACH Early Childhood® Colorado Scholarship Program is sponsored by TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado. This scholarship program provides financial support to early childhood professionals to help them advance their education and career by pursuing a credential, certificate, or degree in early childhood education.
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TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado Scholarship Program — Early Childhood Council Leadership Alliance Empowering Colorado’s early childhood educators with scholarships The TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado Scholarship Program provides financial support to help you advance your education and career.
In 2024, TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado joined 184 scholars on their journey to earn a credential, certificate, or degree in early childhood education. Get all the information you need to choose your scholarship model and submit your application. Continue to Applicant Portal Access resources, forms, and other information you may need on your education journey or to get the most our of your TEACH scholarship.
Continue to Recipient Portal Access forms, guides, and other resources you need to get the most out of the TEACH scholarship and support your staff on their education journey. Continue to Employer Portal Early childhood professionals who have higher education have been shown to have a better understanding of child development and to be more responsive to the educational and academic needs of young children.
The TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado Scholarship Program offers early childhood professionals a pathway to pursue higher education. Access to scholarships for early childhood education is a critical piece to a successful professional development pathway.
We are affiliated with the national Teacher Education and Compensation Helps Early Childhood ® initiative of Early Years , and we hold the state license to offer scholarships in Colorado. Do you have questions about the TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado Program? We’re here to help!
Shannon Hall , Senior Program Director Em: shannon@ecclacolorado. org For questions about payments, please contact: Enola Garland , Associate Program Director Em: enola@ecclacolorado. org Interpretation is available.
Please schedule a meeting in advance. To fax your application send it to (720) 669-1544.
TEACH Early Childhood® Scholarship Program Annual Reports & State Profiles TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado 2025 Annual Report TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado 2024 Annual Report TEACH Early Childhood® 2024 Annual National Program Report TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado 2023 Annual Report TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado FY23 State Profile TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado 2022 Annual Report TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado 2021 Annual Report TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado 2020 Annual Report TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado FY 20 State Profile TEACH Early Childhood® National Reports TEACH Early Childhood National Annual Report FY24-25 Early Educator Apprenticeship Annual Report FY24-25 Other TEACH Early Childhood® Program Rep ort s Child Care and Early Education Reconciliation How Are States Tackling the Early Educator Compensation Crisis?
Blog from the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment (CSCCE, UC-Berkeley) Life Beyond Graduation: Three-Year Follow Up Study of TEACH Early Childhood® Scholarship Recipients Year One Report Life Beyond Graduation: Three-Year Follow Up Study of TEACH Early Childhood® Scholarship Recipients Year Two Report Life Beyond Graduation: Three-Year Follow Up Study of TEACH Early Childhood® Scholarship Recipients Year Three Report TEACH Early Childhood®: More Than a Scholarship Tackling the compensation crisis What Will 2025 Hold for Early Care and Education?
The Learning Policy Institute’s New Whole Child Policy Toolkit What's the difference between TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado and TEACH Colorado? We get it. Different ‘TEACH‘ programs exist in Colorado and it can get confusing.
But when it comes to names, we’re so lucky to run in the same circles as TEACH Colorado! ECCLA provides the TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado Scholarship , which offers early childhood professionals a pathway to pursue higher education. Many of Colorado’s early childhood education professionals, including directors, teachers, family child care professionals, coaches, and more are eligible to apply for the scholarship.
Meanwhile, TEACH Colorado is a free, one-stop-shop for anyone considering a PK-12 teaching career in Colorado, offering 1:1 advising, information on teaching pathways, downloadable guides and financial aid resources. Does the TEACH Early Childhood® Scholarship Program promote TEACH Colorado on its platform for aspiring teachers? You’d better believe it!
Similar name, distinct offerings, but both working to provide a whole bunch of support for early childhood professionals across the state. The Early Childhood Council Leadership Alliance (ECCLA) is an equal opportunity scholarship provider.
We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, creed, gender, age, national origin, ancestry, disability, marital status, military status, sexual orientation or gender identity or expression in any of its activities or operations. Advancing Students for a Stronger Economy Tomorrow (ASSET) and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) students are welcome to apply!
TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado is a licensed program of Early Years.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Early childhood professionals in Colorado are eligible. While TeachUNITED focuses on K-12, professional development for early childhood educators is an adjacent field. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado Scholarship Program is funded by TEACH Early Childhood® Colorado. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Colorado. 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.
TEACH Early Childhood Scholarships – NH is a scholarship program from the Community-University Partnership for Health and Research (CAPHR) / TEACH NH that funds college education for New Hampshire's early childhood workforce. Scholarships cover tuition and related costs for early childhood educators — including infant, toddler, and preschool care providers — pursuing associate's or bachelor's degrees from accredited institutions. The program aims to reduce financial barriers to higher education for working child care professionals, improve the quality of early childhood instruction statewide, and increase educator retention and compensation. Eligible applicants are currently employed early childhood educators working in licensed child care settings in New Hampshire. The program is designed to help educators earn degrees debt-free while continuing to work in child care.
Teaching Matters, Inc. – Early Learning Matters for Pre-K Programs is a grant from the Altman Foundation that funds organizations delivering high-quality early childhood education programs to improve the social, emotional, and cognitive development of young children from disadvantaged backgrounds. The Altman Foundation prioritizes initiatives that expand or enhance multiple programs across a system or network — it generally does not fund individual schools or standalone early childhood programs. Supported programs focus on increasing high-quality learning time and improving outcomes for underserved children in New York City, including strengthening Family Child Care across the city. This grant awarded $375,000 over two years to Teaching Matters, Inc. Eligible applicants are organizations providing early childhood education programs at scale. Contact the Altman Foundation for current funding priorities and grant inquiry procedures.
On June 2, 2026, the Department of Energy's Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation selected two demonstration-scale facilities — Phoenix Tailings (with MIT and the University of Minnesota) for $66 million, and the Colorado School of Mines (with ElementUSA, PNNL, Principal Mineral, and Rare Earth Technologies Inc.) for the balance — under the Rare Earth Elements Demonstration Facility Program. Both projects pull rare earths from industrial waste — red mud at the Gramercy refinery in Louisiana, and a mix of mine and refining tailings elsewhere. Here is what the selections tell researchers, small businesses, and downstream magnet customers about where DOE thinks the chokepoint actually is, and what to do before the next demonstration-scale solicitation opens.
Read articleThe Energy Department's flagship Early Career Research Program is funded at $145M for FY2026 — $79M in current-year dollars, the rest contingent on FY27 appropriations. Full applications are due June 2 from the ~150 researchers DOE pre-cleared in March. Here's what the program rewards, why this year's announcement leans hard into Executive Order 14303 on Gold Standard Science, what untenured PIs at academic institutions vs. national labs should expect, and how to position for the FY27 pre-application gate next March.
Read articleThree jurisdictions passed laws letting nonprofits get up to 25-50% of grant awards upfront instead of waiting months for reimbursement. The national implications.
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