Archive for the ‘Education Grant Applications’ Category

Teaching Development Fellowships Free Grant Application

Monday, June 28th, 2010

This program has three broad objectives:
1) to improve the quality of humanities education in the United States;
2) to reinforce the link between research and teaching in the humanities; and
3) to foster excellence in undergraduate instruction.

Teaching Development Fellowships cover durations lasting from three to five months and carry stipends of $4,200 per month. Thus the maximum stipend is $21,000 for a five-month award time period.

Applicants must request award periods that suit their schedules and the requirements of their projects. A request for a shorter award period will not boost one’s chances of receiving a fellowship.

Recipients can begin their award as early as June 1, 2010, and as late as March 1, 2011.
The award period must be continual. Fellows might carry up to a half-time teaching load while on tenure of the fellowship. The proposal’s workplan should reflect the applicant’s teaching load during the term of the proposed fellowship

Applicants need to have their department or program chair or dean certify in writing that the institution supports the proposed project and will offer the proposed course after the completion of the award..

Applicants must have completed formal education by the application deadline. Although applicants need not have advanced degrees, individuals presently enrolled in a degree-granting program are ineligible to apply. Graduate students seeking support for a degree in the humanities should consider the Department of Education’s Jacob K. Javits Fellowship Program.

Those who have satisfied all the requirements for a degree and are awaiting its conferral may apply for a Teaching Development Fellowship, but such applicants need a letter from the dean of the conferring school, attesting to the applicant’s status as of October 1, 2009. This letter may be faxed to the Teaching Development Fellowships program at 202-606-8204; alternatively, a PDF version of the signed letter may be included as an attachment to an e-mail message sent to TDFellowships@neh.gov.

NEH does not accept applications by e-mail or fax

See more on this grant here: http://www.neh.gov/grants/guidelines/TD_Fellowships.html

Clinical Research Loan Repayment Program for Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

You do the research. NIH will repay your student loans. That is the idea behind the National Institutes of Health Loan Repayment Programs (LRPs).

In order to be eligible for this benefit program, you will need to be a health care professional and US national, citizen, dual citizen or permanent resident who is qualified/certified/licensed in laboratory or clinical research or have a nursing degree. You must also characterize your financial situation as low income or very low income.

Applicants must agree by written contract to engage in clinical research as employees of the NIH for a minimum two-year period. Maximum program benefit is $35,000 per year in loan repayments and $13,650 per year in Federal tax reimbursements.

Application Cycle and Deadlines

Extramural New and Renewal September 1, 2010 – November 15, 2010

Intramural Renewal September 1, 2010 – February 1, 2011

Intramural New and ACGME September 1, 2010 – May 2, 2011

Application Here: http://www.lrp.nih.gov/apply_here/index.aspx

The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) announced $20 million in grant awards and offers for 120 humanities projects.

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

WASHINGTON (June 10, 2010)—The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) announced today $20 million in grant awards and offers for 120 humanities projects.

New funding supports a wide variety of projects nationwide, including traveling exhibitions, collaborative research, advanced scholarly training in digital humanities, digitization of historic newspapers, programming offered by state humanities councils, and preservation of cultural heritage collections.

See more here: http://www.neh.gov/news/archive/20100610.html

The federal government confirmed Monday its plans to award $234 million in government grants to non profits and organizations who are established members of the AmeriCorps program and helping to improve national services.

The US government and private organizations set aside millions of dollars every year through business grants that help companies get started, improve their trade and stay in business in hard times A lot of people will never apply for a free Government Grant since they somehow sense it isn’t for them, they could feel there’s too much red-tape involved (in which there isn’t), or they simply don’t know who to contact for this money.

$11.5 Billion has been given away in federal grant money for low income housing programs alone. There are also Reserved Free Government Grants now available for the following special interest groups. American Indians, Veterans, Family Members of Veterans, Low Income Families, Community Block Grants, Non Profit Organizations, First Time Home Buyers, Artists, and more.