sponsored
Education
Education’s Social Contract in the Age of AI
Choice, agency, and how to design a learning system where private gain and public good reinforce each other.
Patrick Awuah launched Ashesi University as an institution of higher learning thoroughly shaped by social innovation. While it began by borrowing ideas, methods, and credibility from elsewhere, it has evolved into a uniquely Ghanaian enterprise that is a model for Africa and the world.
Choice, agency, and how to design a learning system where private gain and public good reinforce each other.
The problems are big, the time is short, and the resources are limited.
What the research says about education, jobs, AI, and what students will need to succeed as future workers and citizens.
America needs a new story—one that doesn’t shy away from its racial history—to guide us toward realizing a thriving multiracial democracy.
An excerpt from Beyond Belief on building the evidence revolution in Washington
An excerpt from Reclaiming Our Democracy on how grassroots advocates are made
How network organizations can use AI to better understand and support their members in real time.
The COVID-19 pandemic shattered established views of airborne disease. Although it represents a paradigm shift in public health, the field has yet to catch up.
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Stuart Foundation are pleased to co-sponsor this series of diverse essays on the purpose of public education. The authors write from different vantage points, but each takes seriously a core question: In a time of widespread change, what is public education for, and how can it evolve to meet its promise?
Many nonprofits face a mismatch of their budget and their balance sheet. Funders can help build stronger financial foundations.
Why philanthropy should think of due diligence not as a vetting exercise, but as an opportunity to build deeper partnerships that lead to more sustainable impact.
From Model Ts to tea, organizations devoted to human flourishing need to build the human architecture for their people to breathe.
There is philanthropic investing, and there is commercial investing, and there is nothing in between.
The problems are big, the time is short, and the resources are limited.
In the face of current funding uncertainty, US nonprofits must innovate to sustain their missions.
As AI begins to transform education, work, and social life, we need to focus on developing and expanding capacities essential for human flourishing.
A final sweep of 60 years of evidence reveals durable truths about how development succeeds and fails.