Huron School District awarded STEM curriculum grant

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HURON — The Huron School District is the beneficiary of a grant to enhance the district’s STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) curriculum.
In early 2019, America’s Farmers Grow Rural Education, sponsored by the Bayer Fund, partnered with local farmers to nominate rural schools and awarded more than $2.3 million in grants to enhance their STEM programs.

Because area farmers answered the call, Grow Rural Education has awarded Huron School District with a $25,000 grant.
Huron is one of the many schools across the country that has benefited from the Grow Rural Education program. For each grant-winning school, teachers, students and, oftentimes, community members develop plans to create more engaging and innovative STEM programs. Grow Rural Education grants have helped schools purchase an array of STEM-related materials, such as augmented-reality sandboxes, weather-forecasting and robotics equipment.
Huron will use the Grow Rural Education funds to implement the new Project Lead the Way program for grades K-5, impacting approximately 1,400 students each year. All students will be encouraged to become independent thinkers with the skills to become confident, collaborative problem solvers.
“America’s Farmers Grow Rural Education is a unique program because farmers play an important role throughout the process, from nominating schools to selecting the grant winners,” said Al Mitchell, President, Bayer Fund. “With the incredible support of local farmers, countless grant-winning schools have shared with us how Grow Rural Education funds have made their STEM programs more engaging and, in several instances, positively impacted test scores.”