Mississippi Power Education Foundation awards $33,500 in area grants
The Mississippi Power Education Foundation recently awarded 12 grants totaling more than $33,500 to schools, school systems and educational institutions throughout its southeast Mississippi service area.
The Gulfport School District received a $9,000 grant for the training and orientation of new teachers. The "Teacher Induction Project" will include classroom management techniques, organizational skills and methods of assessment and time management. Time also will be spent with new teachers in the areas of literacy training, conducting parent/teacher conferences, working with special needs students and overall school district orientation. Mentors will also be participants in this project.
Pearl River Community College in Hattiesburg received a $12,000 grant to complete the second year of a two-year program called "Courage to Teach." This new and innovative program is for the personal and professional renewal of educators. Concepts of teacher formation are practiced encouraging educators to reclaim their own wholeness and vocational clarity. This formation process makes connections between renewal of a teacher`s spirit, the retention of our best educators and the revitalization of public education.
Southeast Lauderdale High School in Lauderdale County received a $2,000 grant to establish a project called "The Sky Above - The Earth Beneath." This project would give students an opportunity for active learning through a hands-on encounter with aspects of Astronomy and Geology. Students will use acquired materials to examine rocks and minerals and learn about the geological processes active in and on the earth. They will also be able to observe and experience the awesome expanse of the universe by studying the constellations and learning about atmospheric and weather related phenomenon.
Second Street Elementary School and North Bay Elementary School in Bay St. Louis each received a $1,000 grant to start a program entitled "BESTT." Business Educating Students for Today and Tomorrow unites civic-minded businesses, parents, educators and students in a unique community involvement opportunity. This project will allow teachers to incorporate the state learning standards into a permanent learning center where students can establish a savings account, cook and shop.
Harper McCaughan Elementary School in Long Beach received a $2,000 grant to begin a project called "Tiny Town, Where Big Things Are Happening." The purpose of Tiny Town is to connect high academic standards for students learning to future career roles. The project consists of a series of integrated learning experiences and involves partnerships with local businesses, guest speakers and classroom learning through dramatizations of day-to-day workplace events which take place in a pretend bank, post office, pizza restaurant, plant nursery, police station and hardware store.
The Gulf Coast Education Initiative Consortium, located at USM Gulf Coast, received a $1,680 grant to aid in "Partners for Professional Development." This project is a one-day in-service program for area educators and business people. The goal of this program is to illustrate the benefits of a partnership between educators and economic leaders to help provide quality professional development with an end result of a more qualified work force.
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