Teen Wins Award For A Coding Program
In 2020, Sreenidi Bala, a teenager from Farmington, Connecticut, started a passion project that would change the lives of hundreds of autistic students.
OAR has expanded its commitment to peer education by awarding grants ranging from $500 to $5,000 to support projects that promote autism awareness and acceptance. When non-autistic children understand autism, they develop better relationships with their autistic peers. OAR has helped educate more than 145,000 children through the Kit for Kids Peer Education Program since 2012 and has already awarded eight grants to support autism awareness projects around the country.
Teachers, youth group organizers, parents, and autism professionals are eligible to apply. Applicants with projects that impact low-income communities are encouraged to apply. See the application instructions for further details.
Get more information and the application on OAR’s website. For questions and comments, contact OAR at programs@ researchautism.org.
OAR supports projects that use the Kit for Kids and Autism Tuned In, OAR’s peer education materials, to increase autism awareness and acceptance among students in kindergarten through 8th grade. Example projects include awareness campaigns, workshops, and presentations. Eligible expenses include but are not limited to OAR’s peer education materials, print costs, honorariums and travel expenses for guest speakers, venue rental, and refreshments.
OAR is currently accepting applications on a rolling basis. The next rolling application deadline is January 22, 2022, for projects starting as early as April 1, 2022.