What
we call results are beginnings
by Robert F. Long, Ph.D.
Building
Bridges Initiative
2000 Learning Community Meeting
Washington,
DC
October 21, 2000
It
is with a mixed sense of joy and sorrow that I address you today,
the last day of our final networking conference for the Building
Bridges Initiative. I
am sorry to see the last year approaching and joyful to witness
the success you are all achieving.
I wanted to take a few minutes today to celebrate your
accomplishments and to congratulate you for your success in
responding to the wide range of management and leadership needs of
the Third Sector. The
strong bridge we have built is represented by the network and its
many connecting strategies that link communities of interest and
geography to the development of knowledge and educational
programs. From Buenos
Aires to Indianapolis and Puebla to Phoenix and Albany to Portland
and so on and on, you have all built relationships that will stand
the test of time.
However,
to paraphrase Sir Winston Churchill, this is not the end, but it
is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.
We are
also here to contemplate the next steps to be taken in continuing
efforts to encourage the two-way flow of learning and teaching
that is a focus of the Building Bridges Initiative.
I’m
reminded that the goal of the Initiative was, quite simply, to
change higher education. It
is a daunting challenge to strengthen the management skills of
students, volunteers, and staff in nonprofit organizations by
linking community organizations and institutions of higher
education. The
legendary monolithic nature of academe is well known.
Today, through your efforts, however, the proverbial
“ivory tower” is leaning in the direction of the community.
Nonprofit management education programs around the country
have been expanded, made more accessible and sustained by creating
partnerships between higher education and those working in the
field. Each Building
Bridges project is making its own distinctive contribution to this
essential partnership between practice and knowledge. The
W.K. Kellogg Foundation has been pleased to be a part of these
efforts. On balance, I think that the
ledger will show that our investment has been handled quite well.
With your indulgence, I want to take the
opportunity today to place our activities in some perspective, and
to establish a context for where we
are and where we need to go.
In
1930, breakfast cereal pioneer W.K. Kellogg established his
foundation with one primary goal in mind:
“to help people help themselves.”
From modest beginnings, with programs that served the
health and education needs of youth in southcentral Michigan, the
Foundation has grown to achieve international prominence.
Today, it ranks among the world’s largest private
foundations.
Over
the years, the Foundation’s programming has evolved to meet
changing societal needs. Many
of its initiatives are centered on young people.
Its focus, however, has always
been on organizations in the community through which lives are
improved at the local level.
This happens in many ways, but certainly includes
education, which Mr. Kellogg believed “offers the greatest
opportunity for really improving one generation over another.”
Over
the past ten years, total Kellogg Foundation payments of all types
have totaled over two billion dollars.
As someone once said, a billion here, a billion
there—pretty soon you’re talking real money.
As large as $2 billion seems, it is put in perspective
quickly when one realizes that the Foundation’s annual giving is
not enough to support even one year’s operating costs of an
average sized college or university.
The
established Foundation programming areas include Health; Food
Systems and Rural Development; Youth and Education; and
Philanthropy and Volunteerism.
Of primary interest to this audience, Philanthropy and
Volunteerism was organized as a program area in the late 1980s,
and grantmaking was developed into a long-term strategy to improve
the capacity of nonprofit leaders.
In
1986, the late Pete Ellis began Kellogg Foundation grantmaking to
support the development of education programs focused on the
leadership and management challenges of the nonprofit sector.
After an initial period dedicated to helping build dynamic,
multidisciplinary curricula and delivery systems, in November 1996
the Foundation Board approved support for the next stage of
programming through the Building Bridges Initiative.
The stated purpose of the initiative was to extend the
reach, access, and sustainability of nonprofit management
education programs around the country.
To
place our investment in nonprofit management education in the
proper perspective, however, I should note that Philanthropy and
Volunteerism is the smallest of the four Kellogg Foundation
programming areas, with approximately $190 million in grants over
the past ten years. Of
that amount, just under $85 million went to grants
involving nonprofit management education.
At the
Foundation, we are aware of the perception that Building Bridges
grants benefit only universities, to the exclusion of nonprofit
organizations. While
it is true that most of the Bridges grants were made to
universities, the purpose of all the grants was to improve
education for the benefit of the field, not to build more ivory
towers. Additionally, an analysis of the Foundation’s giving in
this area over the past ten years shows that the lion’s share of
the money didn’t go directly to institutions of higher
education. Instead, a
significant percentage of the monies went to infrastructure
organizations, community-based support centers, research and
student development. The
majority of our grants have been in the field, where the nonprofit
leader is found. The
Building Bridges investment has enabled the expansion of academic
access for leaders, and has deepened the impact of educational
programs on management practice.
The
Initiative wasn’t formed to fund universities or do basic
research; it had a very specific purpose—that to promote a
“give and take” between educational programs and
practitioners, where the needs of the field were addressed.
The Foundation has been doing this type of work for a long
time, and we’ve learned a lot about the characteristics of
bridges between the community and higher education.
For example, our work with the Kellogg Commission on the
Future of State and Land Grant Universities (a panel made up of 24
state university presidents and chancellors) has given us a better
sense of what it means to be an engaged institution.
An engaged institution in higher education sees its present
and future as linked to the well-being of the community.
It promotes open communication, structures its curriculum
accordingly, and understands that institutional and community
learning is a reciprocal relationship.
By the same token, a community (or field of practice)
engaged with higher education is one that utilizes its resources
in a variety of partnerships based on mutual respect and that
shares resources across institutional boundaries.
Engagement is a two-way process, and it requires both sides
to behave differently to achieve their mutual outcomes.
Through
the Building Bridges Initiative, I believe that we have been
extremely successful in becoming “engaged” with higher
education. Your
projects have contributed to greater understanding of the role
that practice plays in the development of educational programs and
of the role that education plays in developing a field of
practice. You have
successfully built bridges. By
improving practice and by changing higher education, the relevance
and utility of this initiative is being demonstrated beyond
question. Its effects are
perhaps most dramatically demonstrated by the steady growth in the
number of colleges and universities which offer academic programs
in Nonprofit Management. In
1990, researchers at Seton Hall University reported a total of
only 17 universities offering a graduate concentration and the
American Humanics network of undergraduate programs reported 13
affiliates. Last
year, a new survey found 179 colleges and universities with a
variety of Nonprofit Management education programs,
and American Humanics had grown to 75 affiliates.
Significant
Organizations, Dates, and Events in the Development of
Nonprofit
Management Education
·
(1935) First
professional fundraising association (American Association of
Fundraising Companies)
·
(1948) American
Humanics is founded
·
(1975) Nonprofit
Management Association is established (MSO)
·
(1977) Yale
University establishes a Program on Nonprofit Organizations
·
(1979) New
School of Social Research starts a Masters Professional Studies in
Fundraising Management
·
(1980)
INDEPENDENT SECTOR founded
·
(1983)
University of San Francisco begins a Masters in Public
Administration with a concentration in Nonprofit organization
management
·
(1985)
Union Institute of Experimenting Colleges and Universities
starts a non-residential doctoral program in Philanthropy &
Leadership
·
(1986) First
University of San Francisco conference on “Educating Managers of
Nonprofit Organizations
·
(1988) Case
Western University starts a Nonprofit Management certificate
·
(1989) Case
Western University starts a Masters of Nonprofit Management
·
(1990) Seton
Hall study finds only 17 universities offer a graduate
concentration in NPM
·
(1990) First
major grants in the field by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation
·
(1991) Association
for Voluntary Action Scholars (AVAS) becomes Association for
Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Associations (ARNOVA);
Journal of Voluntary Action
Research becomes the Nonprofit
and Voluntary Sector Quarterly
·
(1996) Kellogg
Foundation begins field research in Nonprofit organization
education needs
·
(1997) Building
Bridges Initiative announced
·
(1999) Mirabella
& Renz survey finds 179 colleges and universities with a
variety of NPM education programs.
·
(2000) American
Humanics announces its 75th campus affiliate.
The
timeline above shows significant dates and events in the
development of nonprofit management education.
From the creation of the first professional fundraising
association in 1935, to the membership and programmatic milestones
reached in recent years, the timeline shows a long and steady
march towards an educational atmosphere conducive to a more
diverse and effective cadre of Third Sector leaders.
In 1948 American Humanics was founded.
The Nonprofit Management Association was established in
1975, and in 1977, Yale University established the Program on
Nonprofit Organizations. The
Independent Sector was founded in 1980.
In 1985, the University of San Francisco began its Masters
of Nonprofit Administration.
These milestones, along with the creation of masters and
doctoral level programs at a variety of institutions, all
demonstrate a growing attention to the needs of nonprofit leaders
in a changing world.
At the Kellogg Foundation, we like to believe that our
participation in the process was a timely one.
In 1986, the Kellogg Foundation was represented at the
first University of San Francisco conference on “Educating
Managers of Nonprofit Organizations,” and began scanning in this
field. Four years
later, our first major grants, which included Academic Centers of
Excellence in a wide variety of settings, were announced.
Examples of this type of investment include our support of
programs at the University of San Francisco, Case Western Reserve
University and Indiana University.
Finally,
then, in 1996, the Kellogg Foundation began formal field research
on nonprofit organization educational needs, and in 1997, the
Building Bridges Initiative was launched as a strategic response
to the changing operating environment facing nonprofit leaders.
The initiative has been broadened and enriched with the
intentional linkages through partnerships in Latin America and the
United States. In
addition, a number of strategic investments have been made since
then in the broader movement, including support:
-
For
new membership programs and services at ARNOVA,
-
For
a Latin American research network through the International
Society for Third Sector Research,
-
For
minority student graduate scholarship with the Nonprofit
Academic Centers Council,
-
For
applied research through the Aspen’s Nonprofit Sector
Research Fund, among others.
As we leave the Learning
Community Meeting today, the initiative is moving into its final
year but he work is far from over, however.
As we
begin the 21st century, philanthropy and volunteerism
and the nonprofit sector as a whole are undergoing tremendous
growth in resources and in creative approaches.
Just consider some of the current developments in
philanthropy. The New
York Times recently reported that Americans are donating more to
charity than ever before--$175 billion in 1998 alone.
Part of this increase is due to a new wave of philanthropic
givers—high tech millionaires and the so-called “new
philanthropists.” Many
analysts are also looking to what has been termed the
“intergenerational transfer of wealth,” which has been
estimated to represent a potential of up to $25 trillion for
philanthropic purposes during the next 50 years.
The
number of foundations is growing.
America is currently home to more than 44,000 foundations
of all kinds, and their number has more than doubled in the last
20 years. In fact, to
demonstrate how this trend has accelerated, ten percent of the
total number of foundations have been created within the past two years.
Forces
such as government devolution are fundamentally affecting the way
the nonprofit sector is doing business.
A number of other factors are influencing the operating
environment for the nonprofit sector, including increasing
competition among nonprofit organizations for funds and
volunteers, a growing drive to be “more entrepreneurial” in
program development, increasing complexity of laws and
regulations, salary demands of workers who can earn more in the
private sector; and so on. These
new ideas, challenges and new resources have great potential to
transform philanthropy and volunteerism.
Simply put, philanthropy and the nonprofit sector are
evolving, and its leaders and educators need to evolve with it.
What
does the future hold? Our
interest in this area continues unabated.
What the Foundation will not be doing is to continue to
fund the development of academic programs in the way we have been,
however. We hope that
our targeted investments to date have created “currency” for
programs within higher education that will continue to pay
dividends on campus in the form of faculty assignments, priorities
for space, operating money, products and curriculum additions, to
name a few “ripple effects” from our grants.
We hope that the Building Bridges partnerships have helped
create “currency” for nonprofit leaders in the form of active
engagement in the development of educational programs, recognition
and value for the education they receive, and improved capacities
for their work.
We
believe that, as with any “construction project,” Building
Bridges is an effort that calls for a capstone.
Now that its base has been firmly established with your
work, we hope to encourage the creation of a higher profile and
greater permanence for the linkages between practice and the
academy. We
will continue our support for the broader nonprofit management
education. Whatever we do, you can trust that it will be directly
informed by the field, as has always been the case.
Our Building Bridges evaluations are already influencing
the planning underway for the future.
We are
learning a great deal about the need for and approaches to the
continuation of educational programs in this field and the broader
movement of which they are a part.
We are exploring sustainability strategies for the field.
By sustainability, I mean not just funds to support the
operation of programs, but sustainability in the broader sense.
Such an investment might take the form of past Kellogg
Foundation efforts to support the long-term relationships between
a field of practice and its educational programs.
After years of investing in the development of the field of
adult and continuing education, the Foundation helped start a
national awards program for leaders, invested in student
scholarship, and did something it rarely does, helped support the
construction of buildings. Many
of you know the Kellogg Centers for continuing education located
on 18 campuses around the country.
Although we will not be supporting “bricks and mortar”
efforts in this field, these types of investments illustrate the
Foundation’s commitment to the issue of sustainability in one
field of interest. The
possibilities are endless, as the needs for assistance are
diverse. I certainly
anticipate no less of a commitment from the Foundation to this
important work—only a different look.
You will be the first to know as our plans unfold.
Personally,
I offer my continued readiness as a resource.
Whether money needs to be raised, or relationships built, I
hope that all of you will consider me as a friend and as a
partner. We are in
this field together.
Since
1986, the Foundation has placed a premium on its involvement with
improving nonprofit leadership and education.
At the beginning of a new century, philanthropy and the
nonprofit sector are facing a time of unprecedented change and
challenge. The world
in which we operate is being redefined, and we all must adjust to
meet this sectoral evolution.
As we reflect on the accomplishments of the past few years,
perhaps the most useful thing to keep in mind is the importance of
partnerships. Partnerships allow us to achieve in unison what we could
never achieve in isolation.
As we exchange reflections and words of encouragement, we
should take heart in the magnitude of our accomplishments over the
past few years. More
importantly, though, is the admonition that much remains to be
done. Ralph Waldo
Emerson once said that “what we call results are beginnings.”
Let’s make sure that our results—significant
though they are—form the basis for continued beginnings in
improving nonprofit management practice.
The future depends on it.
Thank you very much. |