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Learning and knowledge sharing are important topics in philanthropy. By adopting a learning orientation and exchanging knowledge with others, grantmakers can better position themselves to address the complex problems they’re working to solve today. Learning itself, however, is a broad concept that can take myriad forms. As grantmakers we learn by attending conferences, summits, convenings, and trainings with those in our field or adjacent fields. We learn by listening to grantees, constituents, and beneficiaries on site visits, and by being in the community. We also learn by talking informally with colleagues about our work. Indeed, there is no shortage of learning opportunities in today’s social sector. Recently at the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, we had the opportunity to learn from our peer funders within one of our key areas of work, Starting Smart and Strong. Starting Smart and Strong is a ten-year, place-based effort that strives to ensure that all children grow up healthy and ready for kindergarten by improving the quality of adult-child interactions across all settings where young children learn and grow. We are partnering with three California communities—Fresno, Oakland, and the Franklin-McKinley School District in East San Jose—to test and scale solutions that support parents, caregivers, and educators, and establish proof points that can inform early learning policy and catalyze broader systems change. As we approached the midpoint of the strategy in 2019, it seemed an opportune moment to step back and reflect on the work. In addition to having conversations with our grantees, intermediary partners, evaluators, and Foundation trustees, we were also interested in hearing from other funders either located in or funding work in these same communities. We hoped that through this process of engaging other funders we could gain feedback on issues beyond our focus areas that could impact our grantees’ work developing systems. In philanthropy, candid feedback is crucial to making sure our work is having the impact we seek. Gathering this type of feedback from other funders in a formal way was a new experience for us, and because we wanted candid feedback, we engaged a third-party evaluation partner to conduct confidential interviews with 11 funders supporting early learning efforts across three communities. Through the interviews conducted, we were able to: While we often learn alongside our colleagues in philanthropy, we rarely have an opportunity to gain the perspectives of those making similar investments in place-based, systems-building initiatives. The feedback we received from these peer funders has already proved to be valuable: their reflections have helped us to understand the impact of our work building systems, and better grasp what it takes to catalyze additional philanthropic investments in these highly collaborative efforts. Not only are we learning about other systems change efforts that can deepen our knowledge base, but we are also forging new relationships which may prove helpful in sustaining community change over time. We look forward to engaging our funder colleagues again as our program continues to unfold, and plan to share our experiences more broadly with our colleagues across the Packard Foundation and beyond. This piece was originally published by CEP. Turning to Our Peers
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