About The EE Ford Foundation

 Our Mission:

The Edward E. Ford Foundation seeks to improve secondary education by supporting U.S. independent schools and encouraging promising practices.

Nā Wai ‘Ekolu, student remove invasive fish from Manoa Palolo stream. —‘Iolani School

  • We make Traditional Grants to eligible schools and Associations to help them grow and develop in pursuit of their own missions.

  • We make Educational Leadership Grants to eligible schools or groups of schools that consist of larger dollar awards to fewer recipients.

  • We encourage collaboration with others in both grant cycles.

  • Occasionally, we may make larger, multi-­year Collaborative Innovation Grants in support of projects that have the potential to influence secondary education more broadly and positively affect our democratic society.

  • Beyond grant-making, we share what we learn, sponsor strategic meetings, and work with others to identify and respond to the most pressing challenges facing the field of secondary education.

untitled-745.jpg

By April, 2024, the Board had awarded nearly 2,600 grants approximating over $127 million to approximately 1,000 different schools and associations since its inception in 1957. It should be noted that no attempt has been made to emphasize any one aspect of independent secondary school work in what is called the Traditional Grant program.

The Board has been open to the variety of needs and priorities presented to it by schools. It has supported many areas including capital projects, curriculum, professional development and financial aid as well as special programs pertaining to the environment, technology and pluralism. Just as it has been open to variety in the focus of proposals, the Foundation does not favor any particular type of school (day, coed, boarding, etc.).

Over the years the Foundation has made many grants in support of endowment. There is no question of the importance of a strong and growing endowment to the health of a school, but the Board intends to concentrate its efforts going forward on grants for direct application to program initiatives in support of faculty, students or development of the educational program. Many schools, however, decide to dedicate the required matching funds that must be raised to an endowment and this is consistent with Foundation policy. (In rare circumstances, endowment grants may be made to spur endowment giving in schools that are young or without a meaningful endowment, but for schools with established endowments such grants would only be considered if leveraged significantly by matching funds.)

In the early years, grants of several million dollars were made to thirty-three different organizations interested in and promoting private education. Scholarships, teacher intern programs, alcohol and drug education, trustee seminars, summer workshops, diversity initiatives and career resources are typical examples of these sorts of grants that were given. Apart from a program of grants to State and Regional Member Associations and to the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS), such grants are now made only to member associations where most members are otherwise E.E. Ford-eligible schools (see January 2019 letter from the Executive Director.) All grants have a required matching component of at least one-to-one.

In 2008, the Board first awarded five matching grants of $250,000 to schools invited to compete for The Edward E. Ford Educational Leadership initiative. By April, 2018, a total of 38 such awards had been made. Beginning in April, 2018, schools were allowed to nominate themselves for Leadership Grant consideration. These proposals must be generative and transformational. They must be replicable and will often include partnerships and will frequently address the question, “What is the public purpose of private education?”

About Edward E. Ford

Edward E. Ford, the founder of The Edward E. Ford Foundation, was born on April 23, 1894 in Binghamton, New York. He was the son of A. Ward Ford, who founded and developed a manufacturing business in Binghamton which ultimately became a part of International Business Machine Corporation.

Edward E. Ford with his wife and daughter, Judy.

Edward E. Ford with his wife and daughter, Judy.

Mr. Ford was educated at the Mercersburg Academy and Princeton University. Over the course of his life, he served IBM in various capacities and was also engaged in a number of independent business enterprises in St. Louis and Florida. For many years and until the time of his death, he was a member of the Board of Directors of IBM.

Mr. Ford established The Edward E. Ford Foundation with a relatively small gift in 1957, but the Foundation really commenced operation some three years later when he transferred a much more substantial amount of property to it, rounded out its Board by the appointment of several additional members, and began to work actively with the Board to develop a program directed towards his major objective of improving the quality of secondary schooling focusing exclusively on independent education.

Mr. Ford’s active participation was abruptly terminated by his unexpected death on March 6, 1963. By terms of his will, a major portion of his entire fortune passed to the Foundation.