I'd put down vapor barrier to keep moisture out of the concrete. Middleton has extremely high ground water, particularly in the summer and fall because of all the flood irrigation. Slabs can get quite damp sometimes if the groundwater is high and no vapor barrier provided.
Have you considered a conventional foundation and stem wall since you're stick framing? It'd cost a bit more, but give you a lot better product than a slab with thickened edge. It also keeps the walls a bit higher above ground and snow moisture.
Winters like last winter can frost heave slab on grade construction, particularly with high ground water conditions. Footings and stem walls add to the cost, all depends on the quality of the building you are trying for, and the importance of the extra cost to your overall budget and objectives. If you're just trying for an equipment shed or farm type shop, slab on grade is sufficient. If you want to have a more improved shop, particularly if it is heated and finished, I'd consider going with a conventional footing and stem wall, frame walls over that, and a floating slab floor.
I just built a 36 x 48 garage here. I opted to go with 24" stem walls to about 30 inches total below grade, with the 12" x 24" footing below the stemwall and that leaves the wood wall with 6 inches above grade. I went 24" to make it easy to use 24" wide forms. I did the work myself, took me 4 days to form, tie rebar, and place the footings and the stem walls. I had about $2000 in the concrete, $200 in rebar and form ties, and $250 in form rental. My bid for the floor slab is similar to yours, I'm at $11,800 for 6" of concrete with rebar 18" o.c.