PRESS RELEASES
$101.6 Million in Early Reading First Grants Awarded to 25 States
Archived Information


FOR RELEASE:
September 1, 2006
Contact: Jo Ann Webb or Elaine Quesinberry
(202) 401-1576

U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings today announced the award of $101,687,216 in Early Reading First grants to 32 recipients in 25 states to improve the language and early literacy skills of young children.

"We want to make sure children enter elementary school ready to learn how to read," Spellings said. "Early Reading First uses research-based strategies to introduce young children to books and concepts like letters, sounds and vocabulary. These first years of life are critical for a child's development, and Early Reading First helps ensure children start life on the right track."

Early Reading First is President Bush's initiative to improve the school readiness of our nation's young children, especially those from low-income families, by transforming early childhood education programs into centers of educational excellence. It builds upon the President's Good Start, Grow Smart initiative to improve early childhood education and strengthen early learning for young children. These grant funds are used to improve the use of instructional materials and teaching strategies through scientifically proven practices.

Early Reading First programs focus on language, cognition and early reading so that young children enter kindergarten with the oral language, phonological awareness, print awareness and knowledge of the alphabet necessary to begin to learn how to read.

A complete list of the grantees follows:

Alabama

Gadsden City Board of Education$1.8 million

California

Tehama County Department of Education$2.2 million

Colorado

Clayton College$3.5 million

Connecticut

Bridgeport Public Schools$2.8 million

District of Columbia

Bridges Public Charter School$2.5 million

Florida

Nova Southeastern University$1.9 million

Georgia

Talbot County Board of Education$2.8 million
United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta, Smart Start Georgia$4.4 million

Illinois

The University of Illinois at Chicago$2.7 million
Illinois Action for Children$3.2 million
Hull House Association$3.1 million

Kansas

Topeka Public Schools$3.3 million

Maine

Waldo County Preschool & Family Services$3.1 million

Maryland

Johns Hopkins University$4.1 million

Massachusetts

Little Sprouts Child Enrichment Centers$3.4 million

Michigan

Western Michigan University$3.4 million
Northwest Michigan Human Services Agency$3.1 million

Minnesota

Duluth Public Schools$4.4 million
Saint Paul Public Schools$3.8 million

Missouri

Boone Early Childhood Partners$2.7 million
St. Louis Board of Education$4.2 million

Ohio

Lorain City Schools$3.2 million

Oklahoma

Atoka Choctaw Head Start Center$2.5 million

Pennsylvania

Heritage Health Foundation Inc.$1.8 million
Lancaster-Lebanon Intermediate Unit 13$3 million

Rhode Island

The Providence Plan$3.6 million

South Carolina

Georgetown County United Way Inc.$2.6 million

Tennessee

Knox County Schools$1.4 million

Texas

South San Antonio Independent School District$4.5 million

Utah

Rural Utah Child Development$3.9 million

Virginia

Virginia Commonwealth University$4.4 million

Wisconsin

Milwaukee Public Schools$4.1 million

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Last Modified: 09/01/2006