255 organizations
How adult education works in Atlanta
It is never too late, and most of it is free. GED: Georgia's technical colleges run free or nearly-free GED classes and testing support all over the metro, day and evening. Reading and writing: Literacy Action downtown has helped adults for over fifty years, judgment-free. English classes: free ESL runs at libraries, churches, and community centers across the city — ask at any branch library, they keep the list.
For college and trade school, the FAFSA is the master key — it unlocks Pell grants that pay real tuition, and the HOPE grant covers many technical-college certificates entirely.
What to expect when you call: a placement conversation (not a scary test) to find your starting level, then a class schedule. Classes start in waves — if you missed one, the next is usually weeks away, not months. Childcare during class exists at some programs; always ask.
Bright from the Start is Georgia's state agency for early childhood care and education. It runs Georgia's free Pre-K program, licenses and inspects child care centers and home daycares, and helps low-income families pay for child care through the CAPS subsidy program. Families can use it to find quality-rated child care and check whether a provider is safe and licensed.
6 services
Truly Living Well Center for Natural Urban Agriculture runs urban farms on Atlanta's Westside that grow fresh, naturally grown food. They sell produce through a weekly CSA produce-box program and a monthly farmers market, and they teach people how to grow their own food through classes, training, and farm tours.
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