Taylor Swift Donates $4 Million to Open Education Center

Taylor Swift has donated a whooping $4 million to the Country Music Hall of Fame to open an Education Center named after her on Saturday.

The Country-pop singer has proven yet again that all she has are not just beauty and talents. She also has a very big heart to those who are in need especially when it comes to education.

For the 23-year old American songwriter, education is one of the most important things in the world and it costs millions.

Swift donated $4 million to the Country Music Hall of Fame and this generous amount will be used to fund the opening of the Taylor Swift Education Center. Her donation is the biggest amount the Hall of Fame has ever received from a single artist since its foundation in 1961.

The money will finance the two-storey Taylor Swift Education Center, which will house three classrooms including a “state of the art” children’s exhibit gallery and a learning laboratory.

Swift, known to have a soft spot for the Country Music Hall of Fame, spends much of her time supporting the museum’s fundraising deeds. She even gave one of her first performances at the Hall of Fame and donated several stuff to the museum for showcase. She also has a multi-media exhibit in the museum which draws a lot of attention yearly.

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum will have three additional rooms next to a design studio that will allow students view curators of the museum while they are working with instruments. The new exhibit gallery, which will open on March 2014, will have interactive objects.

Following the ribbon cutting ceremony on Saturday, Swift showed the new classroom and exhibit area to the reporters and high school students prior to the museum’s opening.

"I'm really excited about this music education center and the fact that right now they have three different classes going on today," Swift said in an interview after the ceremony. "It's really exciting that we can be here on a day when they're not only unveiling it, but they're starting to actively use it today."