FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Jerry L. Martin
or Anne D. Neal, 202-467-6787, 1-888-ALUMNI - 8
NEW GUIDE
IS FIRST TO SHOW DONORS
HOW TO AVOID PITFALLS
IN THEIR COLLEGE GIVING
WASHINGTON, D.C. (November
9, 1998) -- In the face of growing public concern about the trends in higher
education, the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) today released
The Intelligent Donor’s Guide to College Giving, the first book designed
to show donors how to avoid pitfalls in their college giving. The 75-page book
focuses on individual and corporate donors wholast year alonegave
$14.2 billion to institutions of higher education.
Education philanthropist
Lee M. Bass, who successfully demanded that Yale University return his $20 million
gift in 1995, called the Guide a wonderful primer for donors who
really care about how their gift is used.
Robert H. Malott, former
chairman and chief executive officer of FMC Corporation, praised the book as
an important new perspective on educational philanthropy. The key to successful
giving is the same as for successful investing, said Malott. Know
the beneficiary of your educational giving as well as you know the companies
in which you invest. Satisfy yourself that educational recipients of your contributions
meet your standards of educational excellence.
Donors who direct
their gifts wisely are the true benefactors of their colleges, said Lynne
V. Cheney, former chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities and
chairman of ACTA.
The Guide, which
is available free of charge, provides step-by-step guidance on targeted giving
as well as profiles of successful gifts.
The Guide is based
on the principle that, It’s your money -- you get to decide how to use
it. It encourages donors to decide what college activities they value
most and direct their funds to those activities. Here are eight pillars
of wisdom drawn from the Guide:
1. Target your giving
to an activity or program you really believe in. Money given to the general
fund may not achieve anything you care about. Be selective. Identify a program
that reflects your own educational values. Direct your funds entirely to that
program.
2. Get all the information
you can. Some programs may not be so good as they look at first glance.
Ask for detailed information. Do some investigating on your own.
3. Find a faculty
friend. The best guide to high-quality funding opportunities is a faculty
member whose judgment you trust.
4. Put your instructions
in writing. Too many donors give on the basis of a smile and a handshake.
State clearly and precisely what activities your funds can be used to support.
5. Monitor your gift.
Sometimes colleges neglect a donor’s instructions. In some cases, they have
not even implemented a funded project. Ask for follow-up reports every year.
6. Put a time-limit
on your gift. If you make a gift in perpetuity, there is no way to ensure
it will be used as you intended. Make a commitment for a year or a few years
and then re-evaluate.
7. Respect academic
freedom. The ability of donors to direct their funds is limited by academic
rules. Respect these limits. Do not attempt to micromanage.
8. Get help. Free
help is available from the Fund for Academic Renewal (1-888-ALUMNI-8). According
to Forbes magazine, the Fund helps donors identify the best academic
programs to support, specify their intent and make sure that intent is honored.
The American Council
of Trustees and Alumni is a nonprofit organization dedicated to academic freedom
and excellence with members from over 200 colleges and universities. ACTA
is located at 1625 K Street, N.W., in Washington, DC The Guide and
information about the Fund for Academic Renewal may be obtained free of charge
by calling 1-888-ALUMNI-8.
HIGHLIGHTS
from The Intelligent Donor’s Guide to College Giving:
- If you were
to invest in a commercial project, you would expect to see it brought to
completionfully, on schedule, and to the level of quality promised.
As an intelligent donor, you should expect no less of your investment in
higher education. (p. 7)
- Informed consumers
lead to better products. As former Yale provost Frank Turner explains, ‘Donor
restrictions can call institutions of higher education to fulfill their
highest ideals ....’ Today, colleges and universities are faced with serious
challenges to both academic quality and intellectual openness. Careful giving
has never been more needed. (p. 7)
- There is
a master key to intelligent giving. Be selective. You do not
buy every stock listed on the New York Stock Exchange. ... You should be
as wise a shopper in your higher education giving as you are in selecting
a stock or mutual fund. Identify the best programs or activities and direct
your funds to those. (p. 7)
- Most donors
give the easy way. They contribute to the annual fund or a capital campaign.
They are supporting the bad along with the good. (p. 7)
- Intelligence
requires separating fact from fiction, reality from illusion. Most alumni
view their alma maters through the rosy lens of nostalgia. You’ve heard
the joke, ‘Nostalgia isn’t what it used to be.’ Well, your college may not
be what it used to be either. Enjoy the memories, but look at
the reality. (p. 11)
- Foundations
as well as universities have a lemming-like tendency to rush after the latest
scholarly, ideological, or pedagogical fashion. They want to be ‘innovative,’
at the ‘cutting edge,’ in tune with the latest nuances of political correctness.
By comparison, such educational ideals as liberal arts education, high academic
standards, close reading, clear writing, and rigorous thinking look hopelessly
old-fashioned. Some donors forget that, for the typical student, it is rock
music that is old and familiar; Plato and Adam Smith are new and dazzlingly
different. So remember: The best program is not necessarily the most
‘innovative’; it may be the most classic, traditional, or timeless.
(p. 17)
- Alumni can help
their colleges best by supporting oases of excellence -- outstanding programs
that give students an alternative to standard campus fare.
Gertrude Himmelfarb, Professor Emeritus of History, City University of New
York (p. 18)
- Political
correctness has had a devastating impact on the university’s mission. On
many of the great issues of the day, students are allowed to hear only one
point of view. Speakers with a different point of view are rarely inviteda
form of prior censorshipor disinvited once their point of view is
discovered. ... Donors can make a major difference by supporting speakers
who will expose students to a range of ideas. (p. 21)
- Think
twice before you fund a building or an endowed chair. If your aim is to
improve the education available to students or the research conducted by
faculty, a building does little to enhance the intellectual content, pedagogy,
or research methodology of either. The key to education and research is
what goes on inside the buildings. (p. 23)
- Donors
should place sufficient restrictions on their gifts to ensure that the college
respects their intent. But they should not try to micromanage and, above
all, they should not threaten academic freedom. Donors who want the best
for their colleges should not only respect that freedom, they should support
and defend it whenever it is threatened. J. Harvey Saunders,
president, Westminster College, 1977-1992 (p. 24)
- Stating
your restrictions in clear and unmistakable terms will save both you and
the college many a heartache. (p. 37)
- The
lesson is simple: give away all you can now. And give it away in limited-term
gifts to keep it accountable. Many a donor has seen his gift
in perpetuity misused even in his lifetime. As one donor points out, ‘The
best safeguard of your values during your lifetime is you.’ (p. 41)
- The
donor who just gives money and walks away is unlikely to achieve the best
results. When I fund scholarships in a particular program, for example,
I make sure to visit the campus at least once a year. I meet with students
and faculty. That way I can gauge the success of the gift, and make changes
if they are needed. Philip Merrill, publisher, Washingtonian
Magazine. (p. 48)
- If
you don’t care if your money goes to support ‘Vampire Fiction’ or ‘Soap
Opera’ studies, you can probably just send a check. But if you want to advance
education in more sensible ways, attach some strings. If in doubt, Lynne
Cheney’s outfit can help. Forbes, April 20, 1998 (inside
cover).
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