First UK philanthropy teaching fellow following Pears donation

Press Office
University of Kent :

The UK’s first dedicated university philanthropy teaching post is to be established at Kent following a £150,000 donation from the Pears Foundation.

The post, to be based within the University’s Centre for Philanthropy, will be known as the Pears Philanthropy Fellow. The first cohort of philanthropic studies students will start in January 2016. They will make use of the latest technology to study via distance learning, as well as at study days on campus.

Although established in the US since the 1970s, philanthropic studies is a new field of academic study in the UK. Students may go on to work in charities, often as CEOs or fundraisers, or go into a related field, such as grant-making or philanthropy advising. Some philanthropists also choose to take these courses to better understand the role of philanthropy and improve the effectiveness of their giving.

Dr Beth Breeze, Director of the Centre for Philanthropy, said the gift was ‘truly transformational’. She added that she was confident that the investment would have a positive impact, not only on those who choose to study at Kent, but also ‘on all those lives affected in the careers of students who go on, or go back, to leading positions in the charity and philanthropy sector’.

Trevor Pears CMG, Executive Chair of the Pears Foundation, said that he believed the new initiative will ‘contribute to a better understanding of the role of private giving in contemporary society, and offer practical ways to help grow an even stronger culture of British philanthropy for the future’.

Professor Keith Mander, University Deputy Vice Chancellor, said that Kent was ‘proud’ to be at the forefront of responding to demand for a better educated charity workforce, as well as demands from within the donor community for greater understanding of the meaning and purpose of philanthropy.

The UK charity sector is a major and growing source of employment, with 765,000 employees, which constitutes 2.7% of the total workforce, a growth of 40% since 2011.