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Alex Barnum
Alex Barnum
Alex Barnum was a Communications Officer at The James Irvine Foundation from 200
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Apr 29, 2010
 Sacramento — The James Irvine Foundation will announce and honor the recipients of the 2010 James Irvine Foundation Leadership Awards at an event in Sacramento today. Now in its fifth year, the awards celebrate extraordinary leaders who are advancing innovative and effective solutions to significant state issues. The awards aim to publicize proven solutions that can inform policymaking and better the lives of more Californians. The seven recipients, described below, will receive six $125,000 awards and additional support from the Foundation for their organizations. (Two co-recipients will share one of the awards.) Following recognition by legislators on the California Assembly floor, recipients will receive their awards from elected and appointed officials at an event at the Sheraton Grand Hotel in Sacramento.
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Jim Canales
Jim Canales
Jim is Irvine’s CEO. A native Californian, he is passionate about the Foundation
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Apr 27, 2010
From the Center for Effective Philanthropy blog, April 26, 2010
Fueled by new technology and a change in mind-set, foundations have become more transparent about their activities and operations in recent years. This has been heartening, given the responsibilities and privileges inherent to our tax status, and the fact that we must work in partnership with many constituents and stakeholders in order to achieve our goals. Just recently, there has been a major contribution in this regard by the Foundation Center’s Glass Pockets website, which provides a look at best practices in foundation transparency and which encourages the field to move further in this direction. The number of foundations and array of practices reflected on that site is impressive, and Irvine’s work on performance assessment, the subject of these blog posts, has sought to contribute to this movement. In the first three posts of this series I described why we developed a performance assessment framework, outlined some of the challenges we’ve encountered in assessing Irvine’s performance, and shared feedback from our board, the primary audience for the Annual Performance Report. In this final post I want to argue that robust performance assessment activities — and the transparency they encourage — serve to make philanthropy more effective. View the full blog post.
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Jim Canales
Jim Canales
Jim is Irvine’s CEO. A native Californian, he is passionate about the Foundation
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Apr 23, 2010
From the Center for Effective Philanthropy blog, April 22, 2010
In an earlier post on this blog, I pointed out that the audience for the Annual Performance Report (.pdf)is Irvine’s board of directors. As we delivered the fourth of these at our annual board retreat last month, we devoted some time to learning more about the board’s perspectives on the report. There were two key themes that emerged, related to the value of context, and the appropriate frequency of the report. Regarding context, board members expressed in numerous ways how much they value the contextual information that the report provides. Two sections stood out in this regard: first, a table that describes how Irvine’s funding compares to other funders in our program areas, and second, a section on program context indicators, where we provide broader indicators related to our programs, such as per capita public spending for the arts across the U.S. or data on high school drop-out rates in California. This latter section is not meant to suggest that our work will necessarily affect those numbers, but rather to expose the board to broader data sets that help contextualize our program work. The positive reaction to these sections of the report underscores for me how important it is to help our boards gain a deeper understanding of the environment for the Foundation’s activities. We can explain our goals and strategies and describe grants aligned with them, but there will always be a missing piece if the board is not able to contextualize our foundation’s work. The board’s feedback encourages us not only to consider other ways to use the report to provide such context, but also to explore how we can shape other board materials and meetings in ways that expose them to the broader environment for our work. View the full blog post.
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Jim Canales
Jim Canales
Jim is Irvine’s CEO. A native Californian, he is passionate about the Foundation
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Apr 21, 2010
From the Center for Effective Philanthropy blog, April 20, 2010
In my last blog post I described why we started assessing our performance as a foundation and how we developed an Annual Performance Report (.pdf) that balances analysis of our grantmaking with tracking of overall institutional effectiveness. As we have engaged in institutional assessment work, we have encountered three broad challenges I will explore in this post: - The need to distinguish between reporting on activities and describing outcomes and impact
- The difficulty of summarizing complex social change
- The inherent conflict of assessing the past in a forward-facing enterprise
Activities vs. Impact We are always looking for quantitative ways of describing and analyzing our work. Since the grants we award (and the ways we track those grants) are clearly quantifiable, they have become a prominent part of the Annual Performance Report. For example, we examine trends and changes in our grantmaking over time, explore the geographic distribution of our funds, and examine the populations served by our grants. While this provides an easily quantifiable way of examining our grantmaking, we realize that describing where our resources go is not the same as conducting an assessment of impact. The same challenge applies to other sections of the report, where we describe financial and investment performance, summarize reports we have published, or discuss how we have refined our strategies based on what we are learning. While all of this together provides a comprehensive picture of our activities in a given year, it may or may not provide a complete assessment of institutional performance. View the full blog post.
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Jim Canales
Jim Canales
Jim is Irvine’s CEO. A native Californian, he is passionate about the Foundation
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Apr 16, 2010
From the Center for Effective Philanthropy blog, April 15, 2010
At last year’s CEP conference in Los Angeles, I presented (.pdf) on the Irvine Foundation’s approach to assessing foundation performance, joined by David Colby from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. I think it’s fair to say that David and I were presenting approaches used by our respective foundations that remain works in progress – Irvine’s even more so than RWJF’s given its focus on this area for many more years. In view of the interest in this topic at the conference, and my own desire to share what we are doing at Irvine in an effort to improve upon it, I appreciate the opportunity offered by CEP to write a series of blog posts on the subject of assessing foundation performance. I plan to do this in four parts, addressing the following topics: - Why we developed an approach to foundation performance at Irvine
- What we have found particularly challenging about assessing foundation performance
- How our board has engaged with us on this subject
- Why assessing foundation performance is both important and necessary
In reflecting upon Irvine’s experiences, I hope to stimulate readers’ contributions to deepening our collective understanding of this important subject and to improving our efforts to measure and understand our performance as foundations. View Jim's 2009 presentation on assessing foundation performance. View the full blog post.
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Jim Canales
Jim Canales
Jim is Irvine’s CEO. A native Californian, he is passionate about the Foundation
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Apr 01, 2010
 At Irvine and many other foundations, a key question that occupies our collective attention is: What impact are we having? Arriving at a satisfying answer to that question is complicated by numerous factors. First, as philanthropic entities, most of what we “accomplish” is through others. Second, many of us focus on ambitious, long-term goals that can be difficult to measure and challenging to quantify. And third, it is rare that our institutions and resources alone are responsible for a particular success, so there are always questions of attribution. There are certainly other obstacles, but none of this should absolve us from a good faith effort to answer the question. As one way to think about this, we developed a framework at Irvine five years ago by which we could measure our progress in a variety of areas we determined were important to understanding our impact. Although the central focus of this assessment framework relates to the outcomes of our grantmaking, we also include areas beyond our programmatic work that we believe contribute to our progress. Based on this framework, we have prepared reports to our board each year and later posted those reports on our website. And, in conjunction with this letter, we are now sharing publicly our report for 2009, which we presented to our board at its annual retreat in March. The 2009 Annual Performance Report describes the Foundation’s activities across six areas, three related to our program impact and three related to our effectiveness as an institution.
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Thuy Nguyen Kumar
Thuy Nguyen Kumar
As Communications Project Manager, Thuy provides project support for a broad ran
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Apr 01, 2010
In March 2010, the following published articles mentioned the work of the Foundation or our grantees:
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Ray Delgado
Ray Delgado
As Communications Officer, Ray Delgado oversees various communications initiativ
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Mar 12, 2010
San Francisco — The Board of Directors of The James Irvine Foundation has approved 13 grants totaling more than $9 million in support of the Foundation's mission of expanding opportunity for the people of California to participate in a vibrant, successful and inclusive society. (For a list of approved grants, click here.) Of the $9 million, $4.5 million will fund the expansion of the California Linked Learning District Initiative as part of Irvine’s Youth program. $750,000 from the California Democracy program grant will fund Strategic Concepts in Organizing and Policy Education to conduct outreach related to state budget and fiscal issues. Additionally, a grant in the Arts program provides $300,000 to the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts to expand programming and audiences following the renovation of its facility. Expanding the Linked Learning Approach Irvine’s Youth program seeks to increase the number of low-income youth in California who complete high school on time and attain a postsecondary credential by the age of 25. Grants approved as part of Irvine’s Youth program include a $4.5 million grant to ConnectEd to develop, expand and support the California Linked Learning District Initiative, which supports nine high school districts to implement systems of Linked Learning pathways, which bring together strong academics, demanding technical education and real world experience in a range of fields such as engineering, arts and media, and biomedicine and health.
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Thuy Nguyen Kumar
Thuy Nguyen Kumar
As Communications Project Manager, Thuy provides project support for a broad ran
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Mar 01, 2010
In February 2010, the following published articles mentioned the work of the Foundation or our grantees:
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Jim Canales
Jim Canales
Jim is Irvine’s CEO. A native Californian, he is passionate about the Foundation
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Feb 08, 2010
The following op-ed article by Jim Canales, Irvine's President and CEO, ran in the San Diego Union-Tribune on February 8, 2010 Voters are disenchanted. They’re alienated from a government that too seldom consults them and is struggling to adequately provide the services that we used to take for granted. But Californians are also ready to respond if they know their contribution will count. A historic opportunity is before them. This year, for the first time in California, citizens will control a process at the core of representative government. Redistricting, a long-cherished prerogative of the Legislature and partisan insiders, has been turned over to California’s voters. The maps that define the 40 Senate and 80 Assembly districts will be prepared by an independent panel of 14 members, the Citizens Redistricting Commission. Instead of creating partisan clusters or designing safe seats for favored incumbents, the commissioners will strive for districts that respect communities and enhance their voices in Sacramento. The commission will be chosen from a pool of public-spirited applicants who enlist in the cause of reform. They need not be experts in geography or demographics, just thoughtful citizens willing to devote time and energy to making government work for all of us. They should come from all walks of life, all parts of the state, all ethnic backgrounds.
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Contributors
"As Senior Program Officer of the Youth program, Aa..."
"Alex Barnum was a Communications Officer at The Ja..."
"As Director of the California Democracy program, A..."
"As Director of the Youth program, Anne Stanton lea..."
"Anne Vally was with The James Irvine Foundation fr..."
"As a Senior Program Officer for the California Dem..."
"A native Californian, Daniel Silverman leads the F..."
"We occasionally invite outside writers to contribu..."
"Jeanne Sakamoto has worked at Irvine since 2004 an..."
"Jim is Irvine’s CEO. A native Californian, he is p..."
"As Treasurer and Chief Investment Officer, John di..."
"As Arts Program Director, Josephine is leading the..."
"Kenji Treanor has worked at Irvine since 2004 and ..."
"As Manager of Research and Evaluation, Kevin overs..."
"As Communications Officer, Ray Delgado oversees va..."
"Rick Noguchi has been with Irvine since 2008 and h..."
"Ted Russell has been with Irvine since 2005 and he..."
"As Communications Project Manager, Thuy provides p..."
"Vince Stewart was a Senior Program Officer for the..."
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