
Approximately 35% of the public school children who visit the Center come from Title I schools, designated as such due to the large number of low-income students they serve. Pre-COVID, the Field Trip Fund provided an annual average of 75,000 deeply-discounted (and in some cases, free) tickets to groups, including those working with low-income and underserved students.
CENTER FOR PUPPETRY ARTS IN ATLANTA GEORGIA FREE
With the support of generous donors, this mission-critical initiative provides free and discounted admissions to schools, daycares, and community organizations, ensuring financially disadvantaged children can engage with the Center’s educational, entertaining, heartwarming, and thought-provoking programming.\įor almost 40 years, the Center has used its Field Trip Fund to ensure that children from all backgrounds can experience an educational, arts-infused day engaging with puppetry. The Center is committed to reaching children of all racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds through its Field Trip Fund. and help bring underserved children from our community to the Center? No donation is too small or too large. It’s an activity that provides sensory stimulation simultaneously for intellectual and emotional development. They learn to use their imagination when bringing an inanimate object to life. Students who take 4 years of arts and music classes average almost 100 points better on their SAT scores than students with only a half-year or less.Ī puppet show is one of the first experiences a child has with performance arts, even before they see a play, ballet, or even go to their first concert.

