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Definition of Educational Philanthropy

Educational Philanthropy is the voluntary act of providing private financial support to nonprofit educational institutions. To be categorized as philanthropy in keeping with CASE standards, such financial support must be provided for the sole purpose of benefiting the institution’s mission and its social impact, without the expressed or implied expectation that the donor will receive anything more than recognition and stewardship as the result of such support.
 

2024 Update - New Funds Committed

New Funds Committed is one of the two new lenses for measuring fundraising performance in alignment with the CASE Global Reporting Standards

The current definition of NFC is as follows:

New Funds Committed
New Funds Committed are new monies and property committed in the reporting year from any individual or qualified organization. This includes new outright gifts, new documented pledges for up to five years, new irrevocable planned gifts received or committed, and new qualified and documented bequests / legacy intentions

The UPDATED definition of NFC is

New Funds Committed
New Funds Committed are new monies and property committed in the reporting year from any individual or qualified organization. This includes new outright gifts, new documented pledges, new irrevocable planned gifts received or committed, and new qualified and documented bequests / legacy intentions

 

How do we handle pledges lasting longer than 5 years?

Under the revised New Funds Committed, pledge commitments in their entirety can be counted. As with the 2021 edition, pledge payments are counted as received as a part of Funds Received.

The chart below provides guidance on how to count pledges

CGRS FAQ Standards Chart

 

How will the new guidance be implemented?

The 2024 updates to the CASE Global Reporting Standards will be launched initially in the digital edition by March 19, 2024. Updates will be made to the print edition in the next printing. 

The 2024 updates will be reflected in surveys starting with the FY 24 survey cycle as individual surveys come online. 

3.1.2 Donor Control

A donor may express intent for the designation of a gift including general or specific purposes, which are consistent with the charitable purpose of the institution. A donor may not retain any explicit or implicit control over the use of a gift after acceptance by the institution.

(Note: This section on donor control does not refer to future commitments [see Chapter 3.5] or revocable or conditional pledges [see Chapter 3.4.1], which remain in the control of the donor until the institution realizes the gift and are countable in some CASE InsightsSM surveys. It speaks to the use of gifts once they are actually received by the institution.)

The following are examples of donor control precluding the counting of a gift:

  • A donor establishes or contributes to a scholarship fund but requires the ability to select or veto the recipient.
  • A donor makes an unrestricted contribution while requiring the institution to award a professorship to a specified individual.
  • A donor contributes to a fund for a new art museum, provided the institution selects an architect of the donor’s choice.
  • A computer equipment provider seeking an exclusive contract with the institution establishes a need-based scholarship.
  • A donor establishes or contributes to an endowed chair but requires the ability to select or veto the recipient.

     

3.1.3 Donor Influence

Philanthropy is an act of giving and investing in our institutions and in no way should be executed or perceived as an act of quid pro quo. Tangible benefits may negate or reduce gift value. In addition to the prohibitions on donor control after a gift is made, a history of donor support and/or potential must not be permitted to have undue influence on decisions made by the administration. Institutions must be committed to transparency in relationships with donors to express gratitude, while maintaining a clear understanding about the decision-making authority of college / university leadership, including trustees and administration and their delegated officers.

Examples of areas where donor influence must be guarded against and / or prohibited are conflicts of interest, faculty appointments, admissions decisions, coach selections, program priorities and policies, investment policies and strategies, architect selections, search committee participation or candidate selection, and institutional decision-making or priority setting. Exceptions include instances where an institution may choose to avail itself of a donor’s expertise and such involvement is consistent with institutional guidance.

3.6 BEQUESTS / LEGACY INTENTIONS
Bequests / legacy intentions play a very important role in the development of an overall giving strategy when a fundraising professional is working with a donor. These types of commitments differ from outright gifts because they are completely revocable by the donor and do not have the same legal and/or ethical obligations as a pledge or irrevocable gift arrangement. For this reason—the relatively lower degree of donative obligation—these standards advise institutions to develop and announce separate goals for future commitments and outright gifts.

Bequest / legacy intentions are often provisions in a will, trust, or other testamentary document providing a gift to the institution pursuant to applicable laws. Bequest expectancies / legacy intentions may also be made contingent upon a certain event happening.

The gift may be designated as a percentage of the donor’s estate, a specific amount or description of property (such as securities, real estate or other assets), or a residual of the donor’s estate. When a basis for valuation is available, the percentage of the estate may be counted if the donor is age 65 or above. When there is no basis for valuation, then the reported value of the gift is zero. The gift value (for a zero-amount gift) and appreciation of value (for a gift previously recorded with a value) is reported once the bequest / legacy intention is realized.

Proper documentation in the form of a will, trust, legal document, letter of intent, or gift agreement is necessary to ensure proper stewardship of the commitment. Successful institutions steward these commitments to engage donors for the longer term.

Documented legacy and estate commitments from donors under age 65 are not counted in New Funds Committed, but they could be included in a future year’s results when the donor meets the age qualifier of 65. When the age of the donor is unknown, a bequest/ legacy intention should not be counted in totals until the year when the qualifying age is validated. 
 

5.1.3 Donor Directed and Donor Advised Funds

With a donor-advised fund, the donor sends an asset to a tax-exempt organization (often affiliated with a financial institution or community foundation, called a fund sponsor) as a gift to that entity. The asset is then owned by and under the control of that sponsor. The donor then contacts the sponsor and advises it to make a gift to a qualified organization. In this case, the fund sponsor is the legal donor. The gift source is reported as an “other” organization (if the sponsor is not an official foundation) or a “Foundation” (if the sponsor is a recognized community foundation or other grantmaking foundation). It is at the point of distribution that a gift is made, even if the donor-advised fund is designated to your institution when funded

6.1 SUMMARY

This chapter is a complement to the reporting standards in Section II and offers institutions general guidance regarding both annual fundraising efforts and fundraising campaigns.

If the institution is in the public phase of a campaign as of July 1, 2021, continue to follow the policies approved by the campaign committee at the outset.

If you are in the quiet phase of a campaign, consider if any modifications to your policies are warranted based on these updated standards and guidelines.

Frequently Asked Questions about the CASE Global Reporting Standards

The CASE Global Reporting Standards are a common set of standards, guidelines, and definitions for reporting the results of educational philanthropy activities at schools, colleges, and universities across the globe.

Previously referred to as the CASE Reporting Standards and Management Guidelines, the new book (available in print and for the first time, through a digital subscription) represents worldwide standards for institutional fundraising, with new definitions for educational philanthropy and important guidance around gift counting, funds received, new funds committed, and donor control and influence.

The CASE Global Reporting Standards are an example of CASE and its members’ leadership in shaping internal institutional policies for counting, reporting, and recognizing philanthropic contributions.

All professions have standards; advancement is no different – and CASE is the leader for advancement standards (fundraising, and increasingly alumni relations and marketing and communications), and has been promulgating Standards since 1982.

Philanthropic support is a critical revenue stream which requires educational leaders to understand standards exist and enable effective leadership in this area and to mitigate risk. Educational philanthropy and advancement are increasingly a global endeavor and the need for educational institutions to have the ability to benchmark with their most appropriate peer institutions has never been more important. Standardizing key metrics for educational institutions anywhere in the world means all institutions can now benchmark against each other using the suite of CASE Insights tools. In addition, regional supplements for Australia and New Zealand, Canada, Mexico, Singapore, United Kingdom, and the United States provide opportunities for regional comparisons to complement the global perspective.

Donors want to know that their contributions to institutions are being stewarded ethically and transparently. Institution leaders want to ensure their advancement efforts follow the principles and standards set across the profession, and in service of institutional mission. The increasing complexity of gift agreements warrants closer monitoring of those instruments so that they remain consistent and viable in alignment with the goals of the institutions they support.

This is at the heart of CASE’s mission: to be a catalyst for advancing education worldwide by inspiring, challenging, and equipping communities of professionals to act effectively and with integrity to champion the success of their institutions.

Creating and adhering to a set of methods, standards, and guidelines for reporting fundraising activities allows schools, colleges and universities to represent the work of all institutions in honest and clear ways. Having a set of guidelines means that CASE can use them as the underpinning of its ongoing work to guide the profession, ensure integrity and consistency in educational advancement work, and to support CASE’s own work in data collection and reporting. Consistency and transparency in reporting makes global benchmarking possible. 

For the first time, The CASE Global Reporting Standards will include chapters from Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and Europe which are applicable to CASE’s global membership and address the needs of institutions and members in key markets around the globe.   

Also, for the first time, the CASE Statement on Ethics and the CASE Principles of Practice will appear within the pages of the standards book. The CASE Principles of Practice were all recently updated by the CASE Commissions for Philanthropy, Communications and Marketing, and Alumni Relations and provide global guidelines for those professions. 

Within the standards themselves, guidance on donor control and donor influence, new metrics for funds received and new funds committed, and further clarification on sponsored research grants are among the more significant changes made within the new global edition.  

Finally, the CASE Global Reporting Standards will appear in print and digital form for the first time in its history. Because this and future editions will be digital, it means CASE and the advancement disciplines will be able to respond to changes in the profession in a more timely and rolling basis. 

The CASE Global Reporting Standards are being slowly incorporated into CASE Insights surveys. Starting with the CASE Insights Voluntary Support of Education survey for FY22 results in 2022, you will see new optional questions reflecting the CASE Global Reporting Standards. Optional questions will also be incorporated into other CASE Insights surveys as those surveys launch in 2022 and 2023.

In some cases, implementing the new standards will require the drafting of new survey questions. In others, it will mean the modification of an existing question.  One of the great opportunities (and challenges) to standardization is the ability to make meaningful comparisons across CASE’s global suite of benchmarking surveys. In achieving this goal, CASE and the CASE Insights team will take care not to disrupt or dilute the analytical value that comes from longitudinal data, working closely with our members and volunteers to determine how best to introduce the new standards with minimal disruption to long-term trend reporting. In some cases, this may mean capturing additional data to supplement current standards for a period of time.  While the exact methods will be determined during the implementation process, the goal is to ensure our data meet current and future needs.  

Standards are a living entity, a reflection of the times and a recurring commitment to operating in ways that are transparent, replicable, and commonly understood.  Although the act of reviewing, studying and updating the CASE Global Reporting Standards will be undertaken in structured intervals, the true work of integrating them into the way advancement professionals measure and report on their institution’s initiatives will be an ongoing journey--- that CASE will be there to support every step of the way.  

For the most current guidance, check out the documentation for the individual survey you are participating in.

At the direction of the CASE Board of Trustees and in fulfillment of CASE’s strategic plan, a working group consisting of senior advancement professionals has been meeting since July 2018 to review and update the Reporting Standards and Management Guidelines. 

The working group is representative of all institutions in the CASE membership and endeavored to represent the interests of the entire profession in their work and deliberations. The group was co-chaired by Matthew Eynon, Vice President for College Advancement, Franklin & Marshall College and Brian Hastings, President and CEO, University of Nebraska Foundation.    

The group members followed best practices to develop a set of standards and guidelines which help to ensure consistent and transparent reporting of institutional fundraising and alumni engagement by revisiting longstanding areas in advancement and exploring those new areas that have emerged in recent years. 

In addition to the working group, practitioners from Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Mexico Singapore, the U.K. and the U.S. were each charged with developing supplements to the book that addressed regionally specific nuances that diverged from the global standards and/or required more clarity. 

Orders for both the digital subscription and the print edition of the CASE Global Reporting Standards are available now. Ordering for the Spanish-language edition will be available in April 2023. 

 

Currently a committee of volunteers is working with the CASE Insights team to review the CASE Global Reporting Standards and make recommendations for clarifications or additions.

Have comments you would like to share, email [email protected].

For additional questions about the CASE Global Reporting Standards, e-mail [email protected].

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