UM Receives $1M Grant for Lifelong Learning
        
        
        
        CORAL GABLES, FL – In recognition of its work to engage seasoned  adults age 50 and older in learning opportunities, the Osher Lifelong Learning  Institute at the University of Miami (OLLI at UM) has received a generous gift  from its namesake’s foundation.
Noting the university’s commitment to “education  as a lifelong pursuit,” The Bernard Osher Foundation announced recently a  momentous $1 million grant in the form of a $950,000 endowment and a $50,000  bridge grant to support the Institute’s continued work. This is the second  endowment grant the foundation has awarded the Institute, the first being a $1  million grant in 2014.
“We are grateful to The Bernard Osher  Foundation for its extraordinary support of our efforts to provide a rich  learning environment to our growing class of students 50 and older,” says UM  President Julio Frenk. “Education is not just something you do at a single  stage of your life — the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute provides invaluable  lessons and life skills to our students throughout their lives.”
The Institute offers members dozens of engaging  programs, from history, literature and the arts to world affairs, current  events and languages. Founded in 1984 as the Institute for Retired  Professionals, the Institute’s membership has been steadily increasing through  the years to now more than 1,200. 
“The pioneering efforts and vision of the  dedicated individuals who founded the program in 1984 established a standard of  excellence and a model of active member involvement that have become hallmarks  of the Institute,” says Mary G.F. Bitterman, president of The Bernard Osher  Foundation.
“We recognize that the program’s success  represents the collective achievement of its excellent staff and dynamic  community of intellectually vigorous members, who give generously of their  time, talent, and financial resources,” she says.
OLLI at UM is part of the Division of  Continuing and International Education, which in 2008 received a $1 million  grant from the Osher Foundation to establish the Osher Reentry Endowed  Scholarship Program, which assists nontraditional, reentry students, age  25-50, with tuition expenses. The Osher Reentry Scholars are in the Division’s  and College of Arts and Sciences Bachelor of General Studies program. 
“Mr. Osher is a visionary philanthropist who  understood, before it was fashionable, that it is critical to give adults the  opportunity not only to complete degrees but also to continue active,  substantive learning past the age of 50,” says Rebecca MacMillan Fox, dean of  the Division of Continuing and International Education. “His foundation has  supported learning for and improved the quality of life of many hundreds of  non-traditional students. OLLI at UM, under the superb leadership of its  Director, Julia Cayuso, has grown enormously over the past few years, and has  developed into an authentically member-driven program.”
The  Bernard Osher Foundation, headquartered in San Francisco, supports Osher Lifelong  Learning Institutes on the campuses of 119 universities and colleges, offering  hundreds of non-credit programs and courses for adults interested in continuing  the journey and joy of learning. Bernard Osher, a patron of education and the  arts, started The Bernard Osher Foundation in 1977, which seeks to improve  quality of life through support for higher education and the arts.