| Carnegie Corporation of New York Vol. 1/No. 3 Fall 2001 |
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Also in this issue: Beyond Census 2000: As a Nation, We are the World Beating the Odds: Providing Education for Women and Girls in Africa Early Childhood Education: Distance Learning for Teachers Adds a New Dimension 7 Cities Lead the Movement to Change American High Schools Past Issues:
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Foundation Roundup
Fathers At Work Initiative
Self-Determination in Focus The new journal is a product of Foreign Policy in Focus (FPIF) and part of a self-determination and governance project funded by Carnegie Corporation. FPIF, dubbed the think tank without walls, is a joint project of the Interhemispheric Resource Center and the Institute for Policy Studies. For further information, including how to subscribe: www.fpif.org, click on the Self-Determination in Focus button
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Expands Grantmaking The Foundation, Americas largest health philanthropy, also focuses on issues relating to basic health care access for all Americans, care and support for people with chronic health problems, and reduction of the harm caused by abuse of tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs. For more information: www.rwjf.org.
AdmitOne.org The acclaimed 125-page manual, downloadable at the AdmitOne
web site, is currently being used by after-school programs and other educational
initiatives connected with thousands of youth organizations, libraries,
cultural centers, and museums.
Internet Accountability Study
Global Consortium of Higher Education and Research for Agriculture
(GCHERA) Organized in 1999 under the leadership of Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, National Agricultural University in Kyiv, Ukraine and Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany, GCHERA has established a broad-based network of international academic and industrial experts who will conduct international scientific conferences, promote faculty and student exchanges and share new developments in agricultural science and research. The second global conference of GCHERA met in San Francisco in July 2001 under the leadership of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana. For more information: www.gchera.iastate.edu.
Future of the Performing Arts At risk are midsize performing arts groups that can afford neither highly paid celebrity artists nor massive advertising blitzes. Companies in this category face the most serious financial strain, confronting the prospect of having to become larger and more prestigious or downsizing production budgets, becoming smaller and relying on volunteer performers. Midsize organizations have long been a conduit for young artists to gain performing experience and a sharp reduction in their number will inevitably result in a decline of live performances. To preserve these opportunities, the report suggests a need to develop policies that consider public interests served by artistic endeavors and a re-examination of the role of government in supporting these interests. For more information: www.pewtrusts.org
Youth Vote Study Working with Youth Vote 2000, a nonpartisan coalition of student and community organizations, Yale professors Donald Green and Alan Gerber randomly assigned registered voters to a group of people to be contacted by Youth Vote volunteers or to a control group that would receive no Youth Vote contact whatsoever. Using cross-off lists, volunteers made follow-up calls a few weeks after the election to determine voting rates in both the treatment and control groups. Results showed that those who were canvassed face-to-face were nearly 9 percent more likely to have voted than those not contacted, and that voters who got a phone call encouraging them to vote were 5 percent more likely to turn out. Testing was done near college campuses in New York, Colorado and Oregon using voter lists compiled by student groups and lists purchased from commercial vendors. New York had the widest margin between canvassed and non-canvassed respondents. Margins in Oregon, perhaps because of its voting-by-mail system that permits voters to cast ballots up to two weeks before the election, were less striking. For more information: www.youthvote.org.
American Attitudes on Russia Researchers cite a February 2001 Gallup poll showing that 52 percent of Americans entertain a favorable opinion of Russia and remain steadfast in believing that Russia is of vital interest to the United States. More recent data show 69 percent of Americans rating relations with Russia as extremely or fairly important to our national interest. Other studies sponsored by the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations and PIPA reveal that most Americans believe an inclusive approach is the best way to deal with whatever threats Russia may pose. The analysis of attitudes toward Russia is drawn from results of polls conducted by Gallup, Louis Harris, The Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, NBC/Wall Street Journal, Time/CNN and PIPA. The Program on International Policy Attitudes is a joint program of the Center on Policy Attitudes and the Center for International and Security Studies at the School of Public Affairs, University of Maryland. For more information: www.Americans-world.org
Foster
Care Initiative A special focus of the initiative is the approximately 100,000 older youth who are about to leave or have already left the foster care system. Foster children have markedly higher rates of homelessness, school dropout, unemployment and lack of access to health care. The program, based in St. Louis, will support state and community organizations around the country through grants, technical assistance and coalition building. For more information: www.jimcaseyyouth.org.
Employers Influence on Health Plan Enrollment Analyzed A significant factor influencing the take-up rate of those studied concerned the percentage of a companys workforce earning $20,000 or less. Firms whose low-income workers comprised 35 percent or more of the workforce had lower rates of enrollment than comparable companies with a smaller percentage of low-paid workers. Take-up rates were also affected by the amount of monthly contributions workers were required to make towards a health plan. For example, companies with large numbers of low-paid workers who were asked to contribute $50 per month had fewer enrollees than companies asking for $25 per month. Not surprisingly, when no monthly contribution was mandated, the take-up rate across all income levels was high. The study was released by the Health Research and Educational Trust and the Commonwealth Fund. For more information: www.cmwf.org.
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