Education
A Targeted Approach to Workforce Readiness
Comprehensive reform of a single mandatory subject in Rwandan secondary schools is setting students up for real-world opportunities by aligning classroom learning with life after graduation.
The hard, transformative work of building a society for everyone begins with seeking to love particular people and their particular needs. Part of a series on realizing a multiracial democracy for all.
Comprehensive reform of a single mandatory subject in Rwandan secondary schools is setting students up for real-world opportunities by aligning classroom learning with life after graduation.
Despite widespread acceptance in impact investing of the need for reliable impact data, funding for producing it lags behind.
In the face of immense social challenges, impact investing needs to be more than traditional investing with an impact report.
The road to making legal equal protection real, proactive, and effective is long, but it begins with being clear about the destination. Follow the series.
Social change requires a deep understanding of how people and systems interact, and of how to tap into the powerful effects of people leading together.
Digital technology must develop in service of society, not the other way around.
A conversation with authors Leah Hunt-Hendrix and Astra Taylor about how solidarity relates to identity and how leaders can build cohesion across differences.
An excerpt from Making Work Matter on developing impactful leadership
Despite the revolutionary idea that all are created equal, the American promise of “We, the People” remains unfulfilled. This series, sponsored by PolicyLink, explores how each of us can carry forward the work of generations before us to realize a flourishing nation designed for all of its people.
To fulfill this nation’s promise as a multiracial democracy requires more than tinkering around the edges. Renewal requires bottom-up transformation.
The movement to mobilize big bets in philanthropy is growing. Let’s not dissuade potential donors by framing it as “a new way to fail.”
Every social system has its own unique and self-reinforcing characteristics, practices, and vocabularies. Learning to span these boundaries is a prerequisite for any significant change effort.
How recognizing trauma in ourselves, other people, and the systems around us can open up new pathways to solving social problems.
Because trust-based philanthropy shouldn’t mean blind faith.
Like so many organizations, our environmental nonprofit was rocked by internal conflict. What happened and what did we learn?
The pursuit of better outcomes for underserved communities, rather than the novelty of emerging technologies, should drive innovation in health care.
Striving for value-adding impact means demanding additionality.