Welcome to the Grant Center
As of 2008, the
Foundation focuses its grantmaking on partnerships, programs,
research, and intermediary organizations that support
underserved learners and/or build knowledge about dramatically
improving the level and variety of outcomes for
New England’s learners.
The majority of the Foundation’s grants are made through
its new strategic initiatives.
The Foundation’s new strategic initiatives are:
The Foundation
expects that its new strategic direction will lead to a
re-examining of long-held assumptions about the way students are
educated (what they are taught, when, where, how, and by whom).
Based on what is learned in the initial phase of the
Foundation's new strategic direction (a period that may be
measured in years), decisions will be made that lead to a
substantive, and somewhat narrowed, long-term strategy.
Continued support for funded programs may then be determined by
both the program’s success (based on agreed upon criteria) and
its continued alignment with the Foundation’s evolving long-term
strategy. It will be a process of support, learning, culling,
and focusing for the future.
Engaged Grantmaking
The Foundation’s grantmaking is currently distinguished by the
following characteristics:
-
Multi-year funding: The
Foundation aims to determine the best funding entry points
for each of our initiatives and for the organization as a
whole. To allow for flexibility, the majority of new
commitments are currently short-term (1-2 years) grants. As
the Foundation learns where resources can make the most
impact our grants will become more long-term.
-
Support for organizational capacity: The Foundation
seeks to identify organizations that have been successful as
a parallel support to public education and investigate their
interest and readiness and, if appropriate, support them in
adapting their approaches (and their organization) to
influence or become more “mainstream.”
-
Clusters:
The Foundation has expanded its “cluster” concept,
instituted in 2000 for grantee organizations, to extend to
select groups of stakeholders and opinion leaders. The
Foundation convenes educators, policymakers, business and
community-based leaders, and others to share their
experiences, knowledge, and visions. These conversations
provide essential information on key “hot points” with
issues related to the Foundation’s focus.
-
Evaluation:
The Foundation’s focus on evaluation is now a two-tiered
approach. While it continues to support and expect grantees
to evaluate their work, the Foundation is also making
investments in a system for tracking its own progress
against organizational benchmarks. Gathering data from both
approaches will give the Foundation a more precise account
of how investments are progressing.
Intermediaries
The Foundation sometimes utilizes and funds intermediary
organizations in order to provide technical assistance,
training, and support for program evaluation and improvement to
Foundation-supported organizations.
|