AMERICAN ASSEMBLY
475 RIVERSIDE DRIVE, NEW YORK, NY 10115 www.americanassembly.org

Total Revenue
$3,217,603
Total Expenses
$1,231,705
Net Assets
$27,359,042

Organizations Filed Purposes: A NATIONAL NON PARTISAN PUBLIC POLICY FORUM TO ILLUMINATE ISSUES OF PUBLIC POLICY.

The Open Syllabus Project: The Open Syllabus Project (OSP) provides the first "big data" look at the primary activity of higher education: teaching. It collects and analyzes millions of university syllabi to generate novel academic and public applications of the expertise embedded in these teaching choices. This data has a wide range of uses in scholarly metrics, educational research, and the sociology of knowledge. It supports the work of teachers, publishers, and librarians, and opens up new ways of connecting academic expertise to wider publics at a time when those connections are being attacked. The OSP also helps answer vital questions about how universities prepare students to develop as thoughtful citizens. The project is supported by the Sloan Foundation, Hewlett Foundation, Arcadia Fund, Templeton Foundation, and Digital Science. The program reached a major milestone recently with the completion of the core dataset, which now contains over 6 million syllabi and the launch of the online Open Syllabus explorer. The project now identifies the gender of assigned authors. This will allow us to deploy tools for mapping the comparative frequency with which women authors are assigned across fields, schools, and departments over time. We expect a high public profile for this feature in particular. We also expect, by the end of the summer 2018, to have OSP network graph representations of fields and departments (similar to our large online network graph) available to students, departments, and libraries. In November 2019, the OSP became an independent nonprofit after five years of incubation from The American Assembly. Summer Institute in Oral History The 2019-2020 Summer Institute in Oral History program focused on the challenges we face in documenting the political present when secrecy and distortions of truth threaten the most vulnerable in open societies. What role do public memory and the search for meaning play in rescuing and preserving the stories that we most need to hear? Specifically, we explored what journalists, oral historians, advocates, and scholars of the present can learn from each other, as we sharpen our skills and awareness of how to document the stories that we most need to record and disseminate. The overarching goals are to explore the role of oral history in opening up multiple accounts of truth, and to search for meaning that otherwise may remain marginal moving them to the center of our political discourse. We be Imagining We Be Imagining is a multimodal series of digital programming centered around the We Be Imagining Podcast, Black Siren Radio and our WBI Incubator. Our goal is to infuse academic discourse with the performance arts in order to foster critical conversations around race, gender, class, and disability. This summers institute is co-sponsored by the Columbia Journalism School and The American Assembly.

Executives Listed on Filing

Total Salary includes financial earnings, benefits, and all related organization earnings listed on tax filing

NameTitleHours Per WeekTotal Salary
David H MortimerFORMER PRESIDENT & TRUSTEE60$514,268
Joseph J KaraganisFORMER VICE PRESIDENT60$226,852
Peter BearmanPRESIDENT & TRUSTEE60$218,541
Karla GarciaCFO60$89,501
Shailagh MurrayTRUSTEE3$0
Harriet ZuckermanTRUSTEE3$0
Alondra NelsonTRUSTEE3$0
Nancy CantorTRUSTEE3$0
Lee C BollingerTRUSTEE - EX OFFICIO3$0
Henry CisnerosSECRETARY3$0
Craig CalhounCHAIRMAN3$0

Data for this page was sourced from XML published by IRS (public 990 form dataset) from: https://s3.amazonaws.com/irs-form-990/202111349349302791_public.xml