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News and Information for Technical Educators

GIVE Grant for CTE

 Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee announced recipients of the Governor’s Investment in Vocational Education (GIVE) grant program, which prioritizes learning opportunities in rural counties and enhances career and technical education statewide. Tennessee has made notable progress in rural workforce development which has resulted in securing over 41,500 new jobs and nearly $19 billion in capital investment in rural counties since 2019. This third round of GIVE grants will allocate $41 million to foster regional partnerships between Tennessee Colleges of Applied Technology (TCATs), community colleges and local industries. GIVE Grant for CTE.

“The state with the workers will win every time, and that’s why rural workforce development has been one of my top priorities since day one,” said Gov. Lee. “As a result, companies are choosing to invest and expand in our state, creating greater opportunity and quality of life for all Tennesseans.”

Since creating GIVE, Gov. Lee’s first legislative priority, he has invested $50 million into the program to support rural workforce development through technical education. The first and second rounds of GIVE funding in 2019 and 2021 served an estimated 15,500 students.

The third round of GIVE grants will fund 23 projects statewide. The 23 funded projects will impact 47 counties, including 6 economically distressed and 13 at-risk counties.

List of GIVE projects and recipients:
Grantee Project Title Grant Award
Cleveland State Community College ACT Now: Apprenticeships in Careers and Trades  $450,000.00
Dyersburg State Community College Building Success in the Northwest  $2,000,000.00
Motlow State Community College Bridges 2 Credentials  $2,000,000.00
Motlow State Community College Culinary Workforce Innovation and Student Success Harnessed (WIS2H)  $2,000,000.00
Nashville State Community College Surge to Success  $2,000,000.00
Northeast State Community College Building Economies through Skilled Trades (BEST)  $1,920,985.00
Pellissippi State Community College Aviation Maintenance Technology College to Career Collaborative (ATMC3)  $1,999,497.00
Roane State Community College Leveraging Regional Workforce Partnerships to Create Secondary to Postsecondary Pathways for Nuclear Technology at Roane State  $450,000.00
Southwest Tennessee Community College Southwest Entertainment Production Collaborative (SPEC)  $1,500,000.00
TCAT Hartsville Expanding CTE and WBL Pathways for Student Success through Automation, Healthcare and Transportation  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Hohenwald South Central Partnerships Leading to Career Opportunities  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Jacksboro PATH – Providing Appalachian Training in Healthcare  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Knoxville Nuclear Science Pathway  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Knoxville Industry 4.0 Apprenticeship Pathway – Anderson County  $2,000,000.00
TCAT McMinnville Workforce Impact and Flexible Innovation  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Memphis Hospitality Integrated Training Network: Forging Tomorrow’s Hospitality Leaders;
From Classrooms to Careers in Greater Memphis (HOSPITRAIN)
 $1,904,761.90
TCAT Morristown Five Rivers Partnership for Future Ready Pathways 3.0  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Nashville Pathways to Accelerated Career Experiences (PACE)  $1,845,162.72
TCAT Northwest Advancing the Hospitality and Tourism Industry in Rural West Tennessee  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Oneida Focus on Industry Readiness for Student Training (FIRST)  $2,000,000.00
TCAT Pulaski Doubling Down on Dual Enrollment  $1,263,276.00
Walter State Community College Growing Regional Opportunities for Workforce – Funding Investment for Regional Stem (GROW FIRST)  $1,999,794.96
Walters State Community College Creating Tech Pathways for Success  $1,999,882.38
GIVE Grant for CTE

The Governor’s Investment in Vocational Education (GIVE) is designed to foster long-term regional partnerships between Tennessee Colleges of Applied Technology (TCATs), community colleges, industry, economic development/workforce agencies, and K-12 to identify and address “skills gaps” in local/regional workforce pools. Through data-driven and collaborative work, Tennessee can ensure that postsecondary education institutions are producing the credentials existing employers need while fostering growth and bringing new industry to the state.

The GIVE program facilitates the alignment of workforce and education partners through a $40 million competitive grant process. These funds are available to local collaboratives through a competitive Request for Proposals (RFP) issued by the Tennessee Higher Education Commission (THEC).

Grants of up to $2 million will be available to local/regional collaboratives for periods of up to forty-eight (48) months to facilitate the development and implementation of employer-driven career pathways that include both K-12 education agencies (LEAs) and higher education institutions.

Proposals must identify and address local community/regional skills gaps through one (or a combination) of the following methods:
  1. Enhance, expand, and/or acquire equipment or other resources to develop an academic program that creates a pathway from secondary to postsecondary that culminates in a postsecondary certificate, diploma, or degree and fills a critical and demonstrable local/regional workforce need.
  2. Develop and implement collaborative, meaningful, and structured work-based learning (WBL) experiences. Successful applicants must demonstrate how they will create or expand the infrastructure necessary to sustain successful WBL programs. WBL experiences may culminate in experiences such as internships, co-ops, pre-apprenticeships, registered apprenticeships, or clinicals.
  3. Provide industry-recognized certifications to meet an identified regional workforce need.
Grant applicants must demonstrate the viability of a local/regional collaborative that includes the following mandatory partners:
  1. Any public or private, non-profit, four-year institution may participate as a  partner. The fiscal agent must be a TCAT or community college.  The fiscal agent serves as the primary partner for all grant activities and will execute a grant contract with THEC.
  2. A local/regional workforce or economic development agency (such as: development district, chamber of commerce, or local/regional Workforce Investment Board).
  3. Two or more area employers representing industry sectors with a demonstrated shortage of skilled workers. These employers should be seeking to employ credentialed graduates from the proposed program.
  4. At least one K-12 local administrator representing secondary Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs of study and work-based learning interests.

In this round of funding, all eligible institutions may apply.  However, if an applicant has been funded through GIVE 1.0 and/or 2.0, the following requirements must be addressed:

To ensure that GIVE 3.0 is responsive to current workforce needs in each community and does not duplicate previous efforts.

Collaboratives awarded grant funding during GIVE 1.0 or 2.0 may only participate in GIVE 3.0 via:
  1. The proposal must involve the creation of new (not currently offered) educational training programs; and/or
  2. The expansion of a program that was not previously funded by GIVE 1.0 or 2.0; and/or
  3. The expansion of GIVE 1.0 or 2.0 programs to counties not served by the institution’s previous GIVE program(s); and/or
  4. Expansion of GIVE 1.0 or 2.0 programs within currently served counties to new site(s) in the area of service; and/or
  5. Establishing a stacked credential within the GIVE 1.0 or 2.0 program.

 “A credential is considered stackable when it is part of a sequence of credentials that can be accumulated over time to build up an individual’s qualifications and help them to move along a career pathway or up a career ladder to different and potentially higher-paying jobs.”

Source: GIVE Grant for CTE

https://www.tn.gov/thec/bureaus/legal-and-external-affairs/redirect-legal-and-external-affairs/give-program/give.html

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