|
Showing 1 - 25 of
42 matches in All Departments
The latest edition of this annual grants directory features over
2,700 funding opportunities from more than 1,500
sponsors--including U.S. and foreign foundations, corporations,
government agencies, and other organizations--listed here for
elementary schools, school districts, educators, adult education
programs, alternative education programs, and PreK-12 educational
organizations seeking grant funding. Readers will find grants for
curriculum and teacher development, equipment acquisition, building
construction/renovation, cultural education programs, and many
other program types. Three indexes--subject, program type, and
geographic--help readers identify the right funding program
quickly.
Grants are supposed to enable work, not create more of it. You need
a guide, a map, and the right tools for the job. Helping you from
your earliest brainstorming sessions to fully funded projects, this
essential directory offers countless tips and resources for
humanities scholars as well as artists, and arts organizations
seeking funding for performances, exhibits, residencies, general
operations, fellowships, and numerous other program types. This
invaluable directory highlights thousands of current programs from
over 3,000 sponsors, including U.S. and foreign foundations,
corporations, state arts councils and government agencies and other
organizations.
A treasure chest of information on more than 5,400 current programs
from over 2,500 sponsors, including U.S. and foreign foundations,
corporations, government agencies, and other organizations. Find
grants for basic research, equipment acquisition, building
construction/renovation, fellowships, and 23 other program types.
Each record includes grant title, description, requirements,
amount, application deadline, contact information (phone, fax, and
email), Internet access, sponsor name and address, and samples of
awarded grants (when available). Three indexes - subject, program
type, and geographic - help you to identify the right program
quickly.
Grants are supposed to enable work, not create more of it. You need
a guide, a map, and the right tools for the job. Helping you from
your earliest brainstorming to fully funded projects, this
essential guide offers countless tips and resources. Citizen
groups, government agencies, nonprofits, community foundations and
trusts, and individuals can access the most up-to-date information
on over 4,900 current opportunities from domestic and international
funding sponsors.
|
|