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Find similar grantsPrivate Higher Education Grant Program is sponsored by Arthur V Davis Foundation Pf 3. This program supports projects at four-year residential liberal arts institutions that improve student outcomes or enhance faculty leadership.
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Private Higher Education - The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations Hello, you are using an old browser that's unsafe and no longer supported. Please consider your browser to a newer version, or downloading a The Private Higher Education Program Area supports colleges and universities that prioritize undergraduate education and emphasize the liberal arts.
The Foundations provide grants directly to private colleges and universities as well as to consortia that support those institutions in their educational mission. As a graduate of Amherst College, Arthur Vining Davis experienced first-hand the value of a liberal arts education.
The broad training that he received as a student equipped him to play a number of roles during his career: scientific innovator, corporate entrepreneur, real estate developer, and orchid farmer, to name just a few. His recognition of the transformative impact of liberal learning led him to give regularly to numerous private colleges and universities, and to encourage his Foundations to continue to provide this support.
Although the Foundations fund a variety of programs in higher education, grants typically support projects that improve student outcomes or enhance faculty leadership. The Foundations do not provide grants to support capital projects or endowment. Private Higher Education grants typically range from $25,000 to $300,000, although the Foundations will entertain larger requests.
Grants may support projects that span multiple years. Civil Discourse Grant Applicants The Foundations support several evidence-based programs that help students to improve in the skills needed for civil discourse across difference.
Applicants seeking grants that will focus primarily on students should review the work of the Constructive Dialogue Institute , while those interested in faculty training programs should review the work of the Greater Good Science Center and Duke University’s Civil Discourse Summer Seminar .
Applicants looking to support campus wide civil discourse programming should review the Campus Free Expression Project from the Council of Independent Colleges. We recommend, in addition, that all applicants in this area review the Better Discourse guide from Campus Compact as well as the recommendations provided here .
For projects that involve an intervention or program intended to improve a measurable outcome, a Full Proposal will require an evaluation plan that is overseen by a qualified evaluator. In cases where applicants do not have a qualified evaluator available to them, the Foundations can provide guidance on how to engage a qualified evaluator.
While the Foundations are open to any funding request aimed at supporting Private Higher Education, proposals are especially encouraged concerning the Areas of Focus described below. Advocacy for the Liberal Arts Advocacy for the Liberal Arts The Foundations are committed to the value of the liberal arts in undergraduate education.
As a result, AVDF encourages proposals that aim to provide more students with opportunities to engage the liberal arts regardless of their major or course of study. In addition, the Foundations invite proposals which seek to educate parents, students, and the general population about the nature and benefits of the liberal arts.
Featured Request for Proposals in “Advocacy for the Liberal Arts”: Transfer Pathways Program Arthur Vining Davis Foundations and the Teagle Foundation are partnering to provide grants that support the development of statewide, regional, or consortial academic partnerships between public two-year and private four-year colleges to facilitate transfer and completion of the baccalaureate in the liberal arts.
This grant program aims to bring the lifelong benefits of a liberal arts education to students who historically have been excluded from higher education—including low-income students, first-generation students, students of color, and immigrant students—who now constitute the “new majority” of undergraduates and depend on community college as their gateway to higher education.
Grants up to $25,000 over 6-12 months for planning and up to $350,000 over 24-36 months for implementation will be made to institutions participating in this initiative. The size of the grant award will be based on the number of institutions involved and the scope of the project. Planning grants are strongly encouraged.
We expect this grant program will remain open for approximately three to five years. For more information, click here . Civil Discourse on Campus Civil Discourse on Campus Learning and growth require the opportunity and ability to engage respectfully and empathetically across lines of difference and disagreement.
The Foundations encourage proposals to develop curricular and extra-curricular programs that promote civil discourse and dialogue across social, moral, political, and religious differences. This would include projects that help campus stakeholders to encourage and internalize characteristics that foster respectful, productive dialogue across differences, as well as programs that provide opportunities for such dialogue.
Strong candidates for funding will demonstrate knowledge of evidence-based methods for improving dialogue across disagreement, and will integrate such methods into their proposed project activities. Applicants are also encouraged to comment specifically on the evidence-based resources that they intend to use in their civil discourse programming.
Featured Grants: Teaching Civil Discourse in the Classroom As polarization increases across the United States, our interest in and ability to discuss important and sometimes divisive issues across lines of social, moral, political, and religious difference is under threat. And yet, history and experience makes it clear that a pluralistic democracy can thrive only when we are able to wrestle with such issues openly and respectfully.
A recent grant to Duke University expands upon the Foundations’ efforts in this space. With AVDF support, Duke’s Kenan Institute for Ethics will host a summer program in two consecutive years that will assist faculty members in developing courses that teach students how to dialogue constructively across lines of political disagreement. The project will be led by John Rose, Associate Director of the Civil Discourse.
In addition to his work through the Kenan Institute, Rose has taught several classes at Duke that have successfully promoted civil discourse and increased student understanding of differing viewpoints on a range of issues. Featured Grants in Private Higher Education Management as a Calling Program Teaching Civil Discourse in the Classroom OpenStax Liberal Arts Library Expansion
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: U. S. -based 501(c)(3) private colleges and universities that prioritize undergraduate education and emphasize the liberal arts, or consortia that serve such institutions. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $25,000 - $300,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Applications for Private Higher Education Grant Program are due August 27, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Private Higher Education Grant Program is funded by Arthur V Davis Foundation Pf 3. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
Healthy School Awards Program is sponsored by Blue Cross & Blue Shield Of Mississippi Foundation. Recognizes and rewards public K-12 schools in Mississippi that encourage healthy lifestyle behaviors and implement exemplary school health and wellness initiatives. Awards are given in categories based on school enrollment size, with one school designated as the Healthiest School in Mississippi. Geographic focus: Mississippi Focus areas: Healthy Eating, Physical Activity, Staff Wellness, Tobacco-Free Lifestyles
The Community Grants (New York and Pennsylvania Regions) program is a grant from the William G. McGowan Charitable Fund that supports nonprofits working in Monroe or Yates County, New York, or Lackawanna or Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. Grants average approximately $28,000 and can range from small amounts to six-figure commitments for program or operations support. Eligible applicants are 501(c)(3) organizations whose work addresses the foundation's goals. First-time applicants must submit a Letter of Inquiry (LOI) before applying. The April 2026 application deadline has passed; inquiries are also accepted on a rolling basis for future cycles.