Community Corner

Bartow Education Foundation Awards 196 Teachers Grant Money

The Bartow Education Foundation recently awarded nearly 200 teachers grant money to transform classrooms.

Bartow Education Foundation Executive Director Dot Frasier holds materials purchased by a high school teacher through the teacher grant program.
Bartow Education Foundation Executive Director Dot Frasier holds materials purchased by a high school teacher through the teacher grant program. (Provided by Bartow Education Foundation)

CARTERSVILLE, GA — The Bartow Education Foundation awards 196 Bartow County teachers grant money to transform their classrooms and provide unique educational opportunities for hundreds of students.

“The Teacher Grant program is the largest project we fund,” Bartow Education Foundation Executive Director Dot Frasier said in a news release. "This year, we disbursed $92,301.82 in grants. While that’s a little less than in years past, I am very happy with the outcome considering these unprecedented times. The grant money is introducing our students to materials and lessons that I never thought possible in Bartow County.”

Adairsville High School received $18, 621.59 in grant money – the most out of any school districtwide. Grants, which support learning, collaboration, and results, include the intent to purchase drones and 3-D printers to push the boundaries of innovation. Adairsville High School’s Center for Advanced Studies in Science, Technology, and Math will use its money to erect a four-tier portable greenhouse for an outdoor classroom. Math teachers will now be able to teach a personal finance class, so students will be able to make sound financial decisions for life, and administrators will be purchasing paint to create encouraging, inspiring, and uplifting messages in restroom areas to make a positive impact on the school’s climate and culture, just to name a few grant proposals.

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“So many teachers reach into their own pockets every year to supplement student learning,”
Superintendent Phillip Page said. “So, we are very thankful for Ms. Dot and the Bartow Education Foundation, teachers, and community members who contribute annually to this worthy cause. Our students are learning at higher levels because of them.”

At the middle school level, teachers are spending their grant money on multisensory spaces for exceptional education students, tools to aid in graphic design, and even materials for community service projects, like mercy mats, made for distribution to the homeless population.

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