Jared Foster has taught the Dillon Middle School Chorus in rural South Carolina for seventeen years. His students — forty-five of them, every single one on free or reduced-price lunch — are preparing for Music in the Parks OrlandoFest. His Granted bio is one sentence: "Teaching 17 years and I love my students with all of my heart." He showed Granted what triage has to do for users like him. Two triage answers — "kids will learn new repertoire" and "100% of the kids get free and reduced lunch" — were the entire load-bearing input for the draft that built itself while he was off the page. When he came back, he typed one revision: "Cost per trip is $400 per student." Granted did the math — $18,000 total, $2,500 as partial funding, registration broken out at $52 a student — and Jared exported the DOCX twice and closed the laptop. What his session showed Granted: the triage prompts are the product when the bio is sparse, and the budget tool has to reason from fragments, not require completeness. The roadmap for K-12 single-grant teachers starts at his pipeline.
Cost per trip is $400 per student.



