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“Foundations
don’t fully understand higher education (and vice versa),
and they tend to look outward at issues that affect a lot of institutions
while institutions focus inwardly on their own well being,”
said Gene Tempel, executive director of the Center on Philanthropy
at Indiana University, during his keynote address at CIC’s
19th Annual Conversation between Foundation Officers and College
and University Presidents. Consequently, according to Tempel, too
often there is a gap between what foundations expect and what colleges
can deliver.
Tempel and other
speakers at the October 9, 2007, event addressed the theme, “Foundations
Debate Their Own Future: The Impact on Higher Education of Changing
Assumptions about How Philanthropy Works.” Approximately 100
college and university presidents and foundation officers participated
in the meeting, held at TIAA-CREF’s Clifton R. Wharton Jr.
Auditorium in New York City.
Tempel noted
that the landscape is shifting rapidly in the foundation world and
presidents of universities and colleges need to take account of
the shift if they are to continue to be effective in seeking foundation
grants. His address on “Foundations and Higher Education”
began with a review of recent trends in donor giving, including
the facts that donors are giving larger gifts to colleges and universities
and they are more likely to restrict the uses of their funds. Younger
donors, he said, want to “change the world with a major gift,”
so they are more apt to bring their own ideas to the table and want
to determine how their gifts are used. In addition, foundations
are increasingly dealing with living donors, while more donors are
choosing to establish their own foundations. Today’s donors
with the greatest net worth frequently transfer their wealth through
private or community foundations. Tempel noted that the number of
foundations has exploded in recent years, increasing from fewer
than 22,000 in 1975 to more than 71,000 in 2005, while foundation
giving to education has leveled off in the past ten years. As the
number of foundations has grown, he said, “the foundation
world has become more visible and thus more vulnerable to a distrustful
public that doesn’t understand how it functions.”
To compensate
for the differing expectations between foundation and higher education
officials, Tempel recommended that presidents build coalitions among
institutions and seek funding for collaborative programs; get to
know foundations’ leadership, their goals, and their plans;
learn to deal with foundations’ short-term expectations; build
relationships with donor-designated funds and with alumni leading
foundations and trusts; develop a close relationship with area community
foundations; and establish closer ties with larger research interests.
Always, he advised, college leaders should ask foundation executives,
“How can we be of service to your goals?”
Panelists who
explored “How Internal Influences Come Together to Shape What
Foundations Expect of Institutions Receiving their Grants”
also suggested ways for presidents to approach foundation officials.
Ryan LaHurd, president and executive director of the James S. Kemper
Foundation, especially likes programs that affect a large number
of students, include specific assessment criteria, and can be replicated
in other institutions. He urged presidents to “pay attention
to the types of projects we fund and read our guidelines. Try to
meet people at foundations. Talk to officers about your proposal.
Educate us about what is important to you. Be specific about what
you are proposing. And recognize that foundation program officers
really do want to give away money!”
James Collins,
treasurer of the George I. Alden Trust, said the Trust funds only
small colleges in six New England states with a capacity for effective
use of technology and supports student-centered programs with specific
outcomes such as improving student retention rates and enhancing
student social responsibility.
Edward Jones,
vice president of the JPMorgan Chase Bank and Booth Ferris Foundation,
characterized his foundation as a “reactive funder”
that asks college presidents about their greatest needs and tries
to fund them, often partnering with other funders to do so. This
approach contrasts with most other foundations, such as the Gates
Foundation, that identify the issues they want to address and fund
only programs that address those issues.
Breakout discussion
groups on the subject of “Making the Case for the Impact of
Our Grant-funded Programs in the Face of Insistent Calls for Accountability”
were led by Daniel Fallon, program director of higher education,
Carnegie Corporation of New York; Ilene Mack, program director for
grants, William Randolph Hearst Foundations; Donna Heiland, vice
president for programs, Teagle Foundation; and Eugene M. Tobin,
program officer for liberal arts colleges, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
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