262 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.
Friends of Refugees is a Clarkston nonprofit (founded 1995) that helps refugees and immigrants build new lives after government resettlement help ends. They offer English and literacy classes, job and small-business training, healthy-food and gardening programs, and maternal health support. Their Embrace Refugee Birth program gives pregnant women free childbirth classes, doula support during labor and after birth, breastfeeding help, and help navigating doctors and hospitals.
4 services
Refugee Women's Network helps refugee and immigrant women and their families in metro Atlanta build new lives in the U.S. They offer help settling in, English and job-readiness training, small-business support, health and wellness programs, and youth programs. They are based at Legacy Park in Decatur and have served refugee women for more than 20 years.
8 services