New Publications on Mentor Programs, Foundation-Payout Debate
October 21, 1999 | Read Time: 1 minute
OTHER PUBLICATIONS
Contemporary Issues in Mentoring, edited by Jean Baldwin Grossman, is a report from Public/Private Ventures geared to grant makers who need to know how — and if — mentor programs work. The report includes evaluations of mentor programs run by Big Brothers Big Sisters and Sponsor-a-Scholar; a financial analysis of 52 mentor programs nationwide that includes categories such as cost-per-youth-served (the average program spends $1,114 per youth each year, the study found); and case studies of four mentor programs that have different goals, from career counseling to improving a youth’s self-esteem. The report was financed by the Commonwealth Fund. Publisher: PPV, One Commerce Square, 2005 Market Street, Suite 900, Philadelphia 19103; (215) 557-4400; fax (215) 557-4469; http://www.ppv.org; 100 pages; $15.
Spending Policies for Foundations: The Case for Increased Grants Payout, by Perry Mehrling, calls on foundations to increase their grant making above the federal minimum of 5 per cent of net investment assets.
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Mr. Mehrling, chair of the economics department at Barnard College, in New York, was commissioned by the National Network of Grantmakers to examine trends in asset growth and foundation-payout rates since 1975. The network represents grant makers that finance social-change groups. Publisher: NNG, 1717 Kettner Boulevard, Suite 110, San Diego 92101; (619) 231-1348; http://www.nng.org; 13 pages; $8 plus postage and handling; an executive summary is available free on the group’s Web site.