Students in grades one through five who want to participate in maker labs at the Digital Harbor Foundation are now getting a break on fees.
The nonprofit’s new “pay what you can model” ensures that families interested in sending their children to one of the foundation’s after-school NanoLab programs in web design, woodworking, sound production and more can still do that, even if they can’t afford the full fee.
Find a list of the Digital Harbor Foundation’s NanoLab programs here.
Funding for the new model comes from the Towson-based Robert W. Deutsch Foundation.
Digital Harbor Foundation moves to ‘pay what you can’ model for NanoLab