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June 4, 2024Murphy Announces $1.8 Million in Grants for Computer Science Education
Governor Phil Murphy and Acting Education Commissioner Kevin Dehmer today announced awards of $1.79 million for two grants to expand computer science in schools. One grant will help 27 school districts and charter schools establish or expand high-quality computer science courses in the high school grades, and the other grant will fund three Computer Science Hubs for teacher training operated by three colleges and universities.
The two grants – Expanding Computer Science Professional Learning and Expanding Computer Science High School Courses – were funded through the Governor’s Fiscal Year 2024 budget. Of particular note, 17 of the 27 school districts and charter schools receiving the Expanding Computer Science High School Courses Grant have specifically tailored their programs to cybersecurity and/or Artificial Intelligence (AI), complementing the goals of the “AI Moonshot” the Governor announced earlier this year to establish New Jersey as a home base for AI-powered discoveries to create new economic opportunities and jobs in the industries of tomorrow.
“These grants will better prepare New Jersey students to thrive in today’s information-driven economy by providing greater access to high-quality computer science and technological design education,” said Governor Phil Murphy. “New Jersey is ripe for this kind of innovation in our schools. We have the talent, the infrastructure, and the job market that will fuel opportunities for students across the state.”
“The goals of these grants are foundational elements in the vision set forth in the Computer Science State Plan that the Department unveiled five years ago,” said Acting Education Commissioner Kevin Dehmer. “We know experience in computer science and design thinking can lead to high-demand and innovative careers. These skills can greatly advance opportunities after high school, and that is why we believe it is an educational imperative to expand offerings of these courses.”
New Jersey averaged 13,300 open computing jobs each month last year with an average salary of $96,251, according to the 2023 State of Computer Science Education report by Code.org. While 57.5 percent of high schools nationally offer computer science, 82 percent of New Jersey high schools currently offer such coursework – an increase from 59 percent in 2017-2018.
Expanding Computer Science Professional Learning
This grant will establish three regional Computer Science Learning Hubs to provide professional learning for teachers and school administrators. The goals of the program are to increase the number of high-quality educators from diverse backgrounds available to teach computer science, provide professional learning opportunities and resources to school districts, and expand equitable access to computer science for all students.
Expanding Computer Science Professional Learning Awards Region Recipient Award
- Northern Montclair State University $300,000
- Central The College of New Jersey $300,000
- Southern Stockton University $300,000
Each college or university receiving grant funding is expected to collaborate with Computer Science Hubs operated by other institutions of higher education in the grant program. In addition, the two sources of grant funding can connect with each other; the programming offered by the Hubs created by the colleges and universities will be open to the school districts and charter schools that receive grant funding to implement Computer Science courses in their high schools.
Expanding Computer Science High School Courses
This grant helps schools implement or expand College Board-approved Advanced Placement Computer Science courses, courses in Cybersecurity or Artificial Intelligence, and courses that are eligible for credit in computer science at a college or university. The grant also emphasizes funding to help high schools that currently do not offer computer science establish such courses in 2024-2025 and subsequent school years. New courses must be aligned with the New Jersey Student Learning Standards in Computer Science (NJSLS-CS), and courses must be available for student enrollment in the 2024-2025 school year.
Expanding Computer Science High School Courses Grant Awards
- County School District Initial Award
- Bergen Bergen Arts and Science Charter School $39,700
- Bergen Lyndhurst Township $39,752
- Bergen Northern Valley Regional $40,000
- Bergen Palisades Park $40,000
- Bergen Ridgewood Public Schools $40,000
- Burlington Burlington City $39,871
- Essex Belleville $40,000
- Essex Nutley Township $39,921
- Gloucester Gateway Regional High School $15,000
- Hudson Hoboken $14,779
- Hudson Hudson County Vocational $39,880
- Middlesex Dunellen $15,000
- Middlesex New Brunswick $11,990
- Middlesex South River $39,971
- Monmouth Keyport $39,925
- Monmouth Monmouth Regional High School District $37,918
- Monmouth Ocean Township $32,745
- Morris Roxbury Township $40,000
- Passaic Passaic Arts and Science Charter School $39,700
- Passaic Passaic City $19,664
- Passaic Paterson Arts and Science Charter School $39,700
- Passaic Paterson City $40,000
- Passaic Pompton Lakes $35,072
- Passaic West Milford $16,640
- Somerset Franklin Township $40,000
- Sussex Lenape Valley Regional High School $36,582
- Union Springfield Township $17,274
- Total allocation: $891,084
The above awards are preliminary, pending a final review from the Department. The Expanding Computer Science funding is part of an ongoing initiative that builds upon previous grants designed to elevate the level of computer science and technological design courses offered in New Jersey schools. In total, the Murphy Administration has dedicated nearly $9 million to these initiatives, supporting the establishment of six Computer Science Learning Hubs and computer science course offerings in nearly 50 school districts:
[photo credit] Flickr: Phil Murphy