Nonprofit

Teach For America Metro Atlanta


About Us

Atlanta is a city with a prolific past and a sharp eye on the future. In the 1960s, Atlanta was a major organizing center of the U.S. Civil Rights Movement, with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., students from the city's historically black colleges and universities, and citizens from neighborhoods all over the metro coming together to play major roles in the movement's leadership in the fight to end racial segregation, discrimination, and disenfranchisement. They lifted their voices and marched for justice, making change that would affect our country for decades to come.

Today, Atlanta is at another critical juncture and its kids are at the center of it. Nationally, Georgia public schools have the 7th largest state-wide percentage of low-income students: 464,632 students are growing up in poverty across the Metro Atlanta region. Just one out of every five low-income students in the metro area will attend a high-quality Pre-K program, compared with four out of five in the more affluent areas nearby. Students from low-income communities are twice as likely to attend a school that has not met adequate yearly progress, and just 46 percent of these low-income students will go on to college, compared with 79 percent of their higher income peers.

 

Every child in this city deserves the opportunity for an excellent education, and we are proud to partner with schools, other educators, families and community leaders to strive toward this goal. To find inspiration, all we have to do is look back over the city’s rich history of community partnership. Our corps members and alumni are a source of talent and energy for our city and its schools, and we’re learning from and listening to our community partners to ensure that we’re doing what’s best for our students. Thanks to the hard work and dedication of these advocates, teachers and leaders, Teach For America – Metro Atlanta is positioned to significantly impact the life trajectories of students in our region’s high-need communities.

Atlanta is a city with a prolific past and a sharp eye on the future. In the 1960s, Atlanta was a major organizing center of the U.S. Civil Rights Movement, with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., students from the city's historically black colleges and…

Location

  • 1360 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, None 30309, United States
    Suite 1100
Illustration

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