Stanford Social Innovation Review

Stanford Social Innovation Review is an award-winning magazine covering best strategies for nonprofits, foundations, and socially responsible businesses. Published quarterly by the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Articles Tagged With 'Education'

Date Author Category Title
Fall 2007
David Bank
Nonprofit Management Boots on the School Ground [Free!]

An innovative federal project turns retiring military personnel into teachers.

Summer 2008
John Rice
Education • Corporate Social Responsiblity • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing C-Level Diversity

How to get more racial minorities into corner offices.

Winter 2003
Pehr Luedtke
Head of the Class

Eastside Prep balances support and structure
in a school for low-income minority students.

Spring 2004
Jerry Porras & Tom Vander Ark
Nonprofit Management The Path of Change [Free!]

Jerry Porras and Tom Vander Ark
discuss how leadership, vision, and competition
will determine the future of education.

Summer 2004
Abe Nachbaur
Color Blind

Do students learn better from
teachers of their own ethnicity?

Winter 2004
Ronald A. Heifetz, John V. Kania, & Mark R. Kramer
Nonprofit Management Leading Boldly [Free!]

Foundations can move past traditional
approaches to create social change through
imaginative – and even controversial – leadership.

Summer 2005
Alessandra Bianchi
Nonprofit Management Educators With Borders

Sometimes nonprofit workers have to learn
to “just say no”.

Summer 2005
Alana Conner Snibbe
Mind the Gap

Some social and educational programs inadvertently
widen the gap between the haves and the have-nots.

Summer 2005
Kelly Campbell & Rita Louh
Nonprofit Management Managing Growth [Free!]

How a Boston educational-services nonprofit is realizing its own potential for growth so that its scholars can realize theirs.

Summer 2005
Laura Lauder
Philanthropy & Responsible Investing You Can’t Do That! [Free!]

A venture philanthropist’s experience with reforming education. 

Winter 2005
Roy Wood
Nonprofit Management Trash to Treasure [Free!]

Converting corporate waste into classroom tools.

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