Grant Awards from Jim Joseph Foundation Total More Than $300 Million
March 24th, 2014
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – The San Francisco-based Jim Joseph Foundation today announced that grant awards from recent Board meetings bring its total grantmaking since 2006 to $303,950,338. The Foundation focuses on creating effective and compelling Jewish learning experiences for youth and young adults (primarily ages 13-30) in the United States.
“We are incredibly privileged to work closely with grantees committed to innovative and effective Jewish learning and engagement,” says Al Levitt, President of the Board of Directors of the Jim Joseph Foundation. “Certainly reaching this grant amount is a milestone, but its true significance lies within the number of youth and young adults whose Jewish journeys have been shaped as a result of these efforts.”
The recent grants (from Board meetings in December 2013 and February 2014) in particular show the Foundation’s desire to learn from evaluations, to adapt successful pilot models for other communities, and to help organizations transition to sustainability. A grant to Combined Jewish Philanthropies (CJP) of Greater Boston was the first grant as part of the Foundation’s national funder collaborative on community-wide Jewish teen identity building—a project that resulted from the Foundation’s report on Jewish teen education and engagement.
The latest grants detailed below, totaling $7,769,357, continue to focus on the Foundation’s strategic grantmaking priorities: 1) Increase the Number and Quality of Jewish Educators; 2) Expand Effective Jewish Learning for Youth and Young Adults; and 3) Build a Strong Field of Jewish Education.
Adds Levitt, “We will continue to learn from our past work and find the best possible partners to help create vibrant Jewish life and learning opportunities.”
Major Grants from December 2013 and February 2014
Combined Jewish Philanthropies (CJP) of Greater Boston, Inc.
Up to $1,396,857 over four years (2014-2018) to be matched on a dollar for dollar basis
Repair the World
Up to $3,000,000 over three years (2014-2016)
Israel Institute
Up to $1,420,000 over three years (2014-2017)
Brandeis University Summer Institute for Israel Studies (SIIS)
Up to $150,000 over one year (2014-2015) to Brandeis University’s Schusterman Center for Israel Studies for the SIIS—an institute to train college professionals—to develop and teach courses in Israel studies at their campuses
Jewish Student Connection (JSC)
Up to $497,500 over one year (2014-2015)
American Friends of the Israel Museum
Up to $250,000 over two years (2014-2016) for up to 50,000 Birthright participants to participate in educational tours at the Israel Museum
Reboot, Inc.
Up to $750,000 over one year (2014) to provide general operating and capacity building support
Expedited Grants from December 2013 and February 2014
Jewish Jumpstart
Up to $250,000 over 18 months (2013-2015) to support the Sefaria Project to continue to build its technology for an open source, digitized, multilingual, interactive platform of the written history and laws of the Jewish people
Moving Traditions
Up to $55,000 over one year (2013-2014) to support an evaluation of the program, Rosh Hodesh: It’s a Girl Thing!
Jewish Community Federation (JCF) of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin and Sonoma Counties: JCF-NEXT Birthright Experience Pilot
Up to $167,935 over three years (2013-2016)
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