February 1994 Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina Connections Across the racial divide Nonprofit leaders look to remedy poor race relations Representatives of North Carolina nonprofits and foundations were not surprised by the results of a survey releas^ last month showing blacks and whites are growing apart. While some community leaders see a need to confront race relations head on, others say efforts to eliminate racism should be incorporated into work on issues such as housing, health care and welfare reform. By Barbara Solow A survey commissioned by / \ the Z. Smith Reynolds / y Foundation of Winston- Salem has raised some disturbing questions for leaders of grassroots and organized philanthropy. The survey, based on focus group interviews and a telephone poll, showed that while a majority of North Carolinians agree that racial prejudice is a serious problem, fear and mistrust between blacks and whites are growing. Following release of the survey last month, the Philanthropy Journal interviewed more than two dozen leaders of Tar Heel nonprofits and foundations to gauge their reac tions and tap their ideas tor ways to bridge the racial divide. For many people working in edu cation, health care, reUgion, the arts, foundations and social change orga nizations, the significance of the Z. Smith Reynolds report lies not in what it shows but in what it reaf firms. “I think it verbalizes a lot of the conclusions people have drawn on their own,” says Elizabeth Fentress, executive director of the North Carolina Community Foundation. “It should serve to coalesce people and put the people of North Carolina on notice that we do have a problem.” John Hood, vice president of the John Locke Foundation in Raleigh, hopes the report will encourage polit ick leaders to review past anti-dis crimination strategies such as bus ing and affirmative action - strate gies that he heUeves have failed. “One positive aspect of this study is that it moves us in the direction of talking about the impUcations of poU- cy,” Hood says. “We ought to be judg ing pohcies by what they accomplish. If we don’t see specific results, we should change our pohcies.” Others see the report as a wake- up call for the nonprofit sector. “The voluntary organizations where people live their pubhc lives are hi^y segregated, hut they also have a deep and abiding commitment to social justice,” says Gayle Dorman, executive director of the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation in Winston-Salem. “In my view, the issues raised in this report are some of the critical issues of our time. And Look for REPORT, page? WANTING TO IMPROVE Here is the percentage of survey respondents who said they were interested in getting involved to improve race relations. 53% 35% 6%1 26% 24% 14% 21% WHITE BLACK Source: Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation Survey of Racial Attitudes in North Carolina 5% 4% XU 2% Very Interested Somewhat Interested Slightly Interested Not At All Interested Depend^ Not Sure Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina Statement of values Hopkins offers nonprofit principles A just-released international statement of principles for the nonprofit sector promises to be both a road map lor the fledg ling sector in emerging democ racies and developing coun tries, and a thought-provoking document in the U.S. By Katherine Noble “r“ he nonprofit sector now has I a statement of principles to I guide its growth and change in the U.S. and abroad. Recently released by The Johns Hopkins Institute for Pohcy Studies, the “International Statement of Look for HOPKINS, page 22 Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina A Publication Of The News and Observer Foundation 215 S. McDoweU St. Raleigh, NC 27601 (919) 829-8988 VoL. 1 No. 6 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES 1 year 2 years 3 years $57 $104 $143 Multiple-copy discounts available. CaU (919) 829-4763 for rates. FOR SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION, CALL (919) 829-4763 OR (919) 829-4807. Philanthropy '94 Statewide philanthropy conference planned The News and Observer Foundation and the Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina will hold a major conference in October on Tar Heel philanthropy. Nannerl 0. Keohane, president of Duke University, will be the keynote speaker. Stewardship will be the theme of a major conference on philanthropy this fall. Nannerl 0. Keohane, president of Duke University, will deliver the keynote address for the conference, to be held at a North Carolina loca tion to be announced soon. Sponsored by The News and Observer Foun dation in Raleigh and the Phil anthropy Journal of North Caro lina, “Philanthropy ‘94” will be designed mainly for board and staff members of nonprofits and founda tions throughout the state. It also will address issues involving partner ships with the public and for-profit sectors. The conference will feature speakers, workshops and panels devoted to issues of leadership and accountability. It also wUl feature the first pre sentation of the “North Carolina STEWARDSHIP Philanthropist of the Year” award, which will go to an individual or organization. James Johnson, director of the Urban Enterprise Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will address the confer ence on the issue of leadership. The subject of leadership kso wiU be addressed in sessions that exam ine selecting, developing and involv ing board members in an organiza tion; strategic planning; and fundraising. William Rogers, president of Guilford College in (ireenshoro and chairman of the board of trustees of the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foun dation in Winston-Salem, will ad dress the conference on the issue of accountabihty. That subject also will be examined in panel discussions on board-staff relations, and working with the media. The News and Observer Foundation and the Philanthropy Journal plan to make the conference and presentation of the philanthropy award an annual event. The size of this year’s conference will be limited, with early registra tion this spring. Full details will be announced soon. For information, call Marguerite LeBlanc at (919) 829-8991. At the wheel On information highway, driving is up to you The challenge for architects of the information highway is to de sign a system that lets users do the steering and not simply be passengers. By Kay McFadden S everal years ago, I visited an elementary school in one of Washington’s tougher neighborhoods. Seated in a tiny chair at a tiny desk, I heard third-grade teachers tell of their frustrations with the existing curriculum and its static, lecture-based approach. “Kids these days are far more fid gety,” said one snowy-haired veter an. “They grow up in homes with all kinds of distractions that keep them hyped up. They can’t sit for hours with their hands folded while we talk at them.” Rather than bend pupils to the curriculum, those teachers took mat ters into their own hands and bent the curriculum to reality. New meth ods were invented, ad hoc, that invit ed the students to talk, to stand up, to move around, as part of their learning process. Two discoveries emerged. The first was that pupils began perform ing better, partly because a bunch of kids no longer were unnaturally chained to their desks for adult sized periods bet ter suited to a uni versity. Second and more important was the realization that the greater degree of partici pation gave chil dren a proprietary feeling about their education. The mode had shifted from “talked at” to interactive. Sud denly, kids cared more. Since last May, North Carolina residents have heard a great deal about the information highway and its promise: A hi^-speed communi cations network that can reduce edu cational inequities by making the same chemistry class, for instance, simultaneously available to poor schools as well as rich ones. The technological ability to deliv er such benefits is no longer in doubt. And while money is a signifi cant consideration, Gov. Jim Hunt already has shown education is a cornerstone priority by twisting TECHNOLOGY he technology that enables long-distance learning can be a titanic enhancement toward giving children and teachers a similar role in classroom education. arms in the General Assem bly for its fund ing. The danger ous trip-wire on the information highway lies in what we mean by “interactive.” If educators and government offi cials merely see the highway as another delivery system — a sort of high-tech trick le-down — then children simply win experience an electronic form of passivity. Even marketers recognize that won’t work for today’s kids, or adults. Computer video games are not to be sneered at, for at least their creators have recognized that inher ently powerless boys and girls love the sense of control they can exer cise in such games. The technology that enables long distance learning can be a titanic enhancement toward giving children and teachers a similar role in class room education. If leading a class discussion engages an 8-year-old, imagine the empowerment that can come from sharing his or her ideas with peers in another part of the state, nation or world. And if knowing that there are other kids out there like you helps the self-esteem of a lonely or trou bled child, then using a computer to find those others without the open exposure of a classroom can be mar velously reassuring to the timid. For others, interactive technology can have the same benefits. A com puter allows a tiny, underfunded nonprofit to aggressively seek out sources of money, discover its role in a community of similar groups, and organize itself — an important step toward self-command. Just like the children in Washington, nonprofits — and those whom they serve — can be psychologically transformed from passivity to activity. The key to success hes in a philo sophical, not technical, understand ing of interactive technology. Barry Diller, founder of the QVC home shopping empire, understood con sumers would relish a chance to exercise preference at their whim and not that of some rude sales clerk in a big store. Again, an example of proactive behavior’s powerful aUure. Look for TECHNOLOGY, page 22