Austin Partners in Education
The Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce and the Austin ISD founded Austin Partners in Education (APIE) in 1983. The primary function of APIE is to recruit, train and place volunteers in the classroom once a week, every week of the school year.
Once screened and trained by APIE, volunteers provide academic support to students in a small interactive group learning model via Classroom Coaching programs. This year, more than 850 Classroom Coaches join an additional 800 mentors as APIE volunteers in Austin ISD.
APIE's College Readiness program is communicating with more than 1,147 families this school year in Austin, helping them understand the importance of college readiness. The College Readiness team provides outreach, advising, and tutoring to help students who have passed exit-level tests and are graduation ready, but have not scored high enough on tests to meet the state's requirements for College Readiness under the Texas Success Initiative. The College Readiness Program will help hundreds of students in Austin graduate high school College Ready this year, saving them the time and expense of developmental courses upon entrance to college.
To learn more about Austin Partners in Education please visit the website at: www.austinpartners.org
To better understand the programs APIE offers please view their most recent Annual Report, and see the volunteer Spotlight section of the website.
To get involved click the red volunteer button on each page.
To donate via the online donation form or contact Debbie Pringle at dpringle@austinpartners.org
With questions, please email apie@austinpartners.org or call 512.637.0900.
- Next Steps
- Help more local students enroll in college »
- Join The Conversation »
- Contact Us Today:
Drew Scheberle
Senior Vice President
Education and Talent Development
512.322.5628
The Texas Moving Image Industry Incentive Programs provides incentives for film, animation, television, video games, and post-production. Qualifying projects can receive rebates on qualifying Texas production expenses, up to 29% for film and 7.5% for video game development.







