State Commits $61 Million to eLearning

INDIANAPOLIS — The Holcomb administration recently announced the recipients of $61 million in grants designed to improve connectivity and increase devices available to students and teachers through the Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) fund.
Applicants submitted plans that included:
• the purchase of student devices including Chromebooks and iPads for students to take home
• new or upgraded laptops, MacBooks, Chromebooks, and iPads for teachers
• and mi-fi devices with corresponding subscription plans for families who lack reliable Internet connectivity.
These grants will fund a minimum of 68,689 student devices, nearly 2,900 teacher devices, and more than 85,800 connectivity solutions, according to the information provided by applicants.
Grant awardees include 184 traditional school corporations representing 1,366 schools, 64 public charter schools, and 124 non-public schools. There are almost 674,500 students enrolled in schools receiving these grants.
Twelve institutions of higher education will receive more than $11 million. This money will fund specialized training to better support parents and families, students with special needs, English learners, and provide social-emotional learning resources during virtual/remote learning. The initiatives are designed to directly assist K-12 teachers, including targeted professional development opportunities for eLearning, curated curriculum content, and technical assistance in implementing online curriculum. These resources will be made available at no cost to Indiana K-12 teachers.
GEER was established by the federal CARES Act. Traditional public school corporations, public charter schools, accredited non-public schools, higher education institutions, and other education-related entities were eligible to apply.
Over $11 million was awarded to the Marion County Partnership application, which will fund 11 public schools, 49 charter schools, and 31 non-public schools.