Apply for a Teacher Travel Grant This Summer

Summer is the perfect time to research and apply for a teacher travel grant. The key is to look in the right places and write a compelling application.

Then, once you win an award, you might find yourself kayaking the length of the Mississippi River, while developing a river ecology unit. (At least, that’s what one teacher did with a Fund for Teachers grant.)

To help you get started, here are some tips to writing winning proposals, inspiring articles, and a list of interesting travel grants.

The Best Places to Look

Edutopia has covered travel grants in the past. Also check out "Teacher-Tested Travel Grants," "Five-Minute Film Festival: Travel for Teachers," and "No-Cost Teacher Travel" for more grant-writing tips and funding sources.

Plus, the Institute for International Education is an organization that anyone interested in educational travel should get to know. In addition to administering tons of interesting travel grant programs, the IIE is also a source for research, policy updates, and relevant resources for teachers.

  • Grosvenor Teacher Fellowships from National Geographic: Each year, National Geographic and Lindblad Expeditions take K-12 geographic teachers on expeditions around the world. Usually, 25 educators are selected for fellowship trips each year, and participants travel to exotic locations. In 2014, for instance, Grosvenor fellows traveled extensively in the North Atlantic to Greenland, Iceland, and Arctic Svalbard.
  • Fund for Teachers Fellowships: Fund for Teachers fellowships enable teachers to design their own professional development opportunities. International and domestic travel are often included in grant proposals, and FFT has been supporting these grants since 2001. Additionally, FFT has links to some other great travel fellowships.
  • Global Classrooms Program from IREX: This Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs program is a year-long cultural exchange for middle school and high school teachers. The program includes intensive training, an international field experience, and a global education symposium in Washington, D.C.
  • Toyota International Teacher Program: This program from Toyota and administered IIE combines international travel and environmental education. Through the program, secondary educators from U.S. schools go on 2- or 3-week trips to learn about environmental issues and the innovative solutions for environmental challenges.
  • Einstein Distinguished Fellows Program in STEM: The Einstein program enables teachers to advocate for STEM on Capitol Hill and/or Congressional offices for up to a year. The application process for the 2015-2016 school year is set up open in fall 2014.

Writing an Awesome Application

MATT DAVIS'S PROFILE


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