Monthly Archive
December 2011The Unique and Urgent ‘Business’ of Philanthropy
December 22nd, 2011
The following blog post is adapted from a talk presented at a meeting of the Grantmakers of Oregon and Southwest Washington. As Suk Rhee mentioned in her introduction, I am a native Oregonian, so I know that there is no better place than the Pacific Northwest. ...
YouthTruth Announces Strategic Partnership with The New Teacher Project
December 19th, 2011
I am pleased to announce a new partnership between YouthTruth and The New Teacher Project, which will bring student perspectives to teacher performance evaluations. See the video below for details or read the press release. ...
Data Point: How Can Foundations Help Grantees Secure Funding from Other Sources?
December 16th, 2011
In a recent data point post, we shared that the most significant factor program staff consider when determining what type of assistance beyond the grant to provide is specific requests from grantees. In our research, program staff also told us that the most frequent assistance beyond the grant request they receive from grantees is help raising money from other sources. ...
Hard Facts: Data Tells an Unexpected Story in Boston
December 12th, 2011
The city of Boston stands as a gleaming example of the renewed and widespread appreciation for urban living. Its charms, after all, are abundant, from 18th century Beacon Hill streets to dynamic and diverse SOWA, the “new” South End. ...
Data Point: What Information are Foundations Using to Assess Their Programmatic Work?
December 9th, 2011
For our recent State of Foundation Performance Assessment report, we gathered data from 173 CEOs of U.S. ...
Making Transparency Matter
December 8th, 2011
There has been lots of talk lately about foundations and “transparency.” Perhaps the most prominent foundation transparency initiative is a website called Glass Pockets, launched about a year ago by Foundation Center. ...
Data Point: Board Materials
December 2nd, 2011
As we head into December, many foundations are preparing for their end of year board meetings, and hoping that trustees will read and review the materials being prepared. As foundation staff assemble board books, research we conducted several years ago suggests they are likely to send their boards too much material and that much of it will go unread. ...







