ABC Article Directory banner displaying blue butterfly logo. Click to go directly to the main Homepage
Your Ad Here

Home | Business | Financing | Grants

Add This Social Bookmark Button


animated blue butterfly symbol for the ABC Article Directory

Assess Your Programs -- Get More Grant Money


By: Don Peek Click author's name for more of his/her articles

Assessment is a key for getting grant money. Late spring is an excellent time to assess your programs because you have at least one or two semesters of good data. These assessments will help you write better grant applications and get you more grant money.

I write frequently about assessment. I don't apologize for that because good assessment is essential to writing good grants. Following are four ways in which strong assessment can help you acquire the grant money you need:

Proper assessment tells you where you've failed . It can help pinpoint the obstacles to achievement that your district or campus faces. To get a handle on those obstacles, they have to be measured. How many students are failing? Is attendance rising or falling? Are disciplinary problems getting more serious each year? Did the new reading program close the gap between disadvantaged students and others? There are a multitude of areas that need to be assessed in any school. To write that grant application, first and foremost you need to be able to document where achievement gaps exist.

Good assessments also let you know how bad the problems have gotten. For example, it is a problem if your attendance went down by 1 percent during the last year. It's a huge problem if it went down by 7 percent. It's a problem if your failure rate is 5 percent. It is a big problem if your failure rate went from 5 to 10 percent during the past year. The larger problems are usually the ones that warrant grant money. When you have a problem that is really large, you usually can't move enough money in the regular budget to fix it.

Assessments allow you to match up problems with granting entities that are interested in helping you solve those problems. Some grants are primarily for helping disadvantaged students catch up in reading or math. If your needs assessment shows you have that particular problem, it makes it easy to match your needs with a grant donor. The same is true for problems in readiness, technology, the arts, or almost any other area. When you clearly define the needs you have by doing a good assessment, getting grant money gets much easier.

Finally, good assessments give you data you need to support your grant application. Exactly how big is the problem you're trying to fix? Exactly how much will it cost to implement a program that shows promise of addressing that problem? This type of data comes from a thorough needs assessment and goes a long way in your application to convince others that you are fully aware of the problems you face and that you have a good plan for fixing them.

It's true that now is the time you should be writing grants for your summer-school and fall-semester programs. It is imperative, however, that you do a thorough needs assessment at this time of year so you can measure the problems you have, use that data to find the grant money you need, and successfully apply for that grant money.

Article Source: ABC Article Directory



About The Author: Don Peek is an expert in school funding. He has run The School Funding Center since 2001. Its database contains over 100,000 grants available to all types of schools in the United States. Don worked in education for 20 years as a teacher, principal, and assistant superintendent before becoming the VP then the president of the training division of Renaissance Learning, developer of the Accelerated Reader. www.schoolfundingcenter.info



Bookmark and Share eMail This Article to Friends

Please Rate this Article


Not yet Rated



RSS feeds on demand
Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Grants Articles Via RSS!



Copyright ABC Article Directory All rights protected. Script Services by: Sustainable Website Design
Use of our free service is protected by our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service Contact Us
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Wind Powered Hosting

Powered by Article Dashboard