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Three Georgia Universities Among Recipients Awarded U.S. Dept of Education Grants to Develop Personnel in Support of Children with Disabilities 

The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) has awarded more than $35 million in funding for 138 new awards supporting personnel preparation, ongoing professional learning, and leadership development to increase the number of well-prepared, diverse and effective personnel serving children with disabilities. Three Georgia universities are among the recipients of the grants.

Pro Roof GA

OSEP’s Personnel Development Program, authorized by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) Part D, funds activities that recruit, prepare, and retain personnel who serve and support infants, toddlers, children, and youth with disabilities and their families. Personnel include early intervention providers; teachers; related services providers; administrators leading early intervention programs, schools, or local and state agencies; and university faculty who are preparing future generations of personnel to serve children with disabilities.


Two Georgia universities were awarded grants for Preparation of Early Intervention and Special Education Personnel Serving Children With Disabilities Who Have High-Intensity Needs.

Overview: Grants up to $250,000 per year for five years are awarded to IHEs to support high-quality projects that prepare early intervention and special education personnel – including personnel who are multilingual and personnel from racially and ethnically diverse backgrounds – for professional practice in natural environments, early childhood programs, classrooms, school settings and in distance learning environments serving children with disabilities who have high-intensity needs.

Projects were funded under the following two focus areas:

  • Preparing Personnel to Serve Infants, Toddlers, and Preschool-Age Children with Disabilities who have High-Intensity Needs and
  • Preparing to Serve School-Age Children with Disabilities who have High-Intensity Needs.

Degree(s): Bachelor’s degree, certification, master’s degree or educational specialist degree

Service Obligation: Scholars who receive funding through an IHE’s award owe two years of service to the field for every one year of academic support.

Early Childhood

Name State FFY 2023 5-Year Total
The University of Georgia Research Foundation, Inc. GA $129,171 $927,729
Georgia State University Research Foundation GA $222,604 $1,220,198

 


One Georgia university was awarded a grant for Personnel Preparation of Special Education, Early Intervention, and Related Services Personnel at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities, and Other Minority Serving Institutions.

Overview: Grants up to $250,000 per year for five years are awarded to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities (TCCUs), and other Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) that prepare personnel in special education, early intervention, or related services for professional practice in natural environments, early childhood programs, classrooms, school settings and in distance learning environments serving children with disabilities.

Projects were funded under the following two focus areas:

  • Preparing Personnel to Serve Infants, Toddlers, and Preschool-Age Children with Disabilities and
  • Preparing Personnel to Serve School-Age Children with Disabilities.

Degree(s): Bachelor’s degree, certification, master’s degree, educational specialist degree or clinical doctoral degree

Service Obligation: Scholars who receive funding through an IHE’s award owe two years of service to the field for every one year of academic support.

School Age

Clark Atlanta University GA  FFY 2023 $249,987  5-Year Total $1,249,935

“Investing in the preparation and professional development of a strong, diverse workforce to serve children with disabilities is critical, not only to the well-being of individuals with disabilities, but to improve outcomes for all children. Special educators, early intervention providers, and related services providers are essential professionals in our schools, early childhood programs, and communities, but far too many states are struggling to hire qualified personnel in these roles,” said Glenna Wright-Gallo, assistant secretary for the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services. “The Department is working to Raise the Bar by improving learning conditions for all children through uplifting the teaching profession and eliminating personnel shortages. OSEP’s Personnel Development Program grants play a key role in meeting this challenge by helping develop well trained, fully credentialed personnel who have the necessary skills and knowledge to successfully serve children with disabilities and their families.”

Data released in 2022 from the National Center for Education Statistics revealed 45% of U.S. public schools operated without a full teaching staff in October 2022, and special education teaching positions had the highest vacancy rates.

The 126 personnel preparation grants awarded require universities to use at least 65% of the federal funds for “scholar support,” which includes scholarships, tuition and fees, or other support to cover the costs required to complete the preparation program.

Additionally, 11 awards support personnel development through preservice program improvement grants, and one award funds a new national center to support school and early intervention program administrators to effectively implement the IDEA and improve systems serving children with disabilities.

Federal funds are awarded annually to support five-year grant projects. The following table identifies this year’s grants, grant title, number of new awards made for federal fiscal year 2023 (FFY 23), the funding level for FFY 23 and the five-year total funding.

 

84.325 Grant Programs Title Number of New Awards for 2023 Funding from FFY 23 Funds 5-Year Total Funding
84.325D Preparation of Special Education, Early Intervention, and Related Services Leadership Personnel (Doctoral Preparation) 20 $8,532,569 $47,059,059
84.325K Preparation of Early Intervention and Special Education Personnel Serving Children With Disabilities Who Have High-Intensity Needs 41 $8,870,090 $48,288,334
84.325M Personnel Preparation of Special Education, Early Intervention, and Related Services Personnel at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities, and Other Minority Serving Institutions 34 $6,589,389 $40,395,227
84.325R Preparation of Related Services Personnel Serving Children With Disabilities Who Have High-Intensity Needs 31 $6,338,229 $36,328,194
84.325N Associate Degree Preservice Program Improvement Grants to Support Personnel Working with Young Children with Disabilities 11 $2,072,412 $10,138,594
84.325Z National Center for Supporting School Building and Early Intervention Program Administrators To Effectively Implement IDEA and Improve Systems Serving Children With Disabilities 1 $3,000,000 $15,000,000
Total 84.325 Awards and Funding   138 $35,402,689 $197,209,408

Learn more about the 84.325 program and this year’s award recipients here.


U.S. Dept of Education

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