Adapting and Reimagining Our Grantmaking
Learn how grantmakers can stay accountable to the communities they serve, particularly Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) communities who are and will be disproportionately impacted.
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Learn how grantmakers can stay accountable to the communities they serve, particularly Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) communities who are and will be disproportionately impacted.
This 30-minute presentation discusses the differences between education, advocacy, and lobbying; and what foundations and nonprofits are legally allowed to do.
This is a recording of a recent orientation held for newer board chairs.
This page contains recordings and program materials from the Community Leadership Assessment Series. While this series was designed to help community foundations assess the impact of community leadership work, the content is relevant to others involved in similar efforts. These recordings and materials are available exclusively to IPA members.
Ritch Hochstetler and Ben Rheinheimer of ULEAD, a nonprofit which brings youth development training to youth, educators, companies, and foundations, will guide participants through a tangible development strategy with practical action steps for growing youth self-efficacy (confidence in their capabilities) and team building skills.
This program highlights resources offered by government agencies that can benefit those in recovery, families, communities, the nonprofit sector, and employers.
Results from IPA's 2020 survey of Indiana community foundations that promote youth philanthropy through a youth council or school-based grantmaking program.
Jeremy York of InvigorateHR answers questions from Indiana's community foundation field related to unemployment claims, including fraudulent claims, when a former employer may file unemployment, and how you respond to the claim.
Join us for this webinar with Olivia Henry, from the Council of Michigan Foundations, and Eric Hessel, from the Hendricks County Community Foundation. They will share ways their organizations are successfully convening nonprofits and promoting cross-sector collaboration.
Community foundations invite donors and fundholders to respond to both immediate crises—ranging from the COVID19 pandemic to natural disasters—and our foundations’ long-range leadership opportunities. We know how to bring the money in. But how do we best steward, retain, and advise those donors.
Rural sociologist Ben Winchester uses real data and real strategies to help us create even more welcoming and thriving rural communities, especially in light of the new world we’re living in.
In this webinar you will learn about changes the COVID-19 crisis has created in the human resources field and how work might be structured differently in the future.
The heightened awareness of issues of racial justice has generated lots of questions about managing scholarships and grants. How can we respond to this issue without violating laws on discrimination? What policies should we have? What information needs to be confidential?
College campuses have finished or are finalizing their plans for the 2020-21 academic year. What do the changes mean for recipients of your scholarships, especially those families and students continuing to face economic, health, and other logistical hardships? How can you better support those students in the coming year?
As Indiana ranks consistently among the bottom 10 states for voter registration, in this webinar you will learn how to engage your networks to further the effort in voter registration, turnout, and civic literacy.
A list of organizations that have resources to guide youth councils and other youth-serving organizations through conversations and learning exercises about racism and equity issues.
This webinar will help you navigate the most common “red flags” as you lead your private foundation and stay out of any “danger zones!"
This is a peer exchange to learn how you’re looking at your scholarship policies and practices.
Toyota believes an auto company can also be a vehicle for change. That’s why Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Indiana is proud to partner with nonprofit organizations in the local communities where its team members live, work, and play.