Program Officer
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
Education Program Officer William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Menlo Park, California The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation (Hewlett or the Foundation), based in Menlo Park, California, seeks a collaborative and strategic leader to serve as a Program Officer in its Education Program. At a pivotal moment for both the Foundation and the broader field, this individual will help advance an evolving strategy focused on strengthening human connections and expanding rich learning experiences for all students, particularly those furthest from opportunity. Working closely with the Education Program Director and a highly collaborative team, the Program Officer will contribute to shaping and implementing this strategy while engaging with a diverse set of partners across the education ecosystem. This is a unique opportunity to join a highly respected foundation at a time of strategic evolution and to contribute to work that seeks to strengthen public education and its role in supporting thriving communities, a healthy democracy, and a vibrant economy. The Program Officer will bring deep knowledge of public education, ideally grounded in firsthand experience in schools and school systems, and an understanding of how to cohere and align instructional practice, community and systems leadership, and cross-sector partnerships to improve academic and life outcomes for students. They will bring a nuanced understanding of the realities of educational improvement, and the ability to identify high-leverage strategies to help close the gap between aspiration and implementation in public education. The successful candidate will advance Hewlett's vision of deeper learning, a blend of strong academic knowledge with the skills, mindsets, and dispositions that young people need to thrive in a rapidly changing world. The Program Officer will work closely with districts, states, and networks that are working with key civic institutions, community-based organizations and employers to expand rich learning experiences and strengthen human relationships, especially in an increasingly AI-centric world. The candidate will work with the education program team and its partners to build non-partisan coalitions committed to improving public education at scale. Through this work, we seek to enable high quality learning opportunities for all students, especially those furthest from opportunity. To advance the Foundation's goals, the Program Officer will work closely and build strong relationships with school and systems leaders and their local, state, and national partners on the improvement of instructional practice. The Program Officer will bring knowledge, understanding, and expertise of educational implementation at the state, district, and school levels. The Program Officer will have knowledge and experience with efforts to better connect schools and communities - and broaden students learning experiences - through such strategies as career-connected learning and civic-learning. The Program Officer will also collaborate with colleagues focused on complementary strategic priorities such as improving teacher preparation and career advancement, strengthening school and systems leadership, and leveraging enabling environments such as state, local and national policy and ascendent technologies such as artificial intelligence. ABOUT THE WILLIAM AND FLORA HEWLETT FOUNDATION The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation invests in creative thinkers and problem solvers working to ensure that people, communities, and the planet can flourish. Together with its partners, Hewlett is harnessing society's collective capacity to solve our toughest problems - from the existential threat of climate change to persistent and pervasive inequities, to attacks on democracy itself. A nonpartisan philanthropy, the Hewlett Foundation has made grants in the U.S. and globally for nearly six decades based on an approach that emphasizes long-term support, collaboration, and trust. Globally, Hewlett makes grants to address both longstanding and emerging challenges like its efforts to advance gender equity and governance, reimagine the economy and society, and reduce the growing threat of climate change. U.S. efforts prioritize strengthening democracy, advancing education for all, and supporting community-led conservation. In the San Francisco Bay Area Hewlett calls home, it makes grants to support meaningful artistic experiences in local communities and support regional foundations working on critical issues such as housing. Hewlett's grantmaking also invests in advancing racial justice and in strengthening the effectiveness of its grantees, and of philanthropy itself. The Hewlett Foundation's assets are nearly $14 billion with annual awards of grants totaling more than $621 million. More information about the Hewlett Foundation is available at: The Foundation has approximately 130 employees, in programmatic, operational, and investment roles, located in the San Francisco Bay Area. Across the organization, its employees are challenged with meaningful work, have the resources for ongoing professional development and learning, and contribute to a collegial and engaging environment where they can thrive. Hewlett is committed to fostering a culture of inclusion as part of its guiding principles and encourages individuals with diverse backgrounds and experiences to apply. ABOUT THE EDUCATION PROGRAM The Education Program team is refreshing its strategy in 2026. The new Program Officer will support implementation and refinement of this new strategy in the context of ongoing grants management and new grant making. The strategy refresh will build on Hewlett's historic contributions to U.S. education while being adaptive and responsive to changing conditions, contexts, and environments. For example, Hewlett's attention to the deeper learning competencies has successfully expanded the aperture of schooling to include disciplinary knowledge and durable skills such as communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and civic reasoning. Growing support for these skills among parents, higher education institutions, and employers has increased the importance of school and community implementation contexts that enable their development. Building on a foundation of high-quality teaching and learning in schools and classrooms, broader implementation contexts often include learning opportunities with community-based organizations, civic and cultural institutions such as libraries and museums, and career-connected learning in high-demand fields. Enabling and sustaining these efforts at scale will require strategic investments that:
Cati Mitchell-Crossley, Ebony Breaux-Liang, and Rachel Banderob Isaacson, Miller The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation embraces the importance of diversity, equity, and inclusion, both internally in our hiring process and organizational culture, and externally, in our grantmaking and related practices. We are an equal opportunity employer, and welcome applications from people of all backgrounds, cultures, and experiences. This document has been prepared based on the information provided by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The material presented in this leadership profile should be relied on for informational purposes only. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this information, the original source documents and information provided by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation would supersede any conflicting information in this document.
- Ensure new technologies such as artificial intelligence are safe, accessible and open to all, and used to strengthen the work that teachers and students do together.
- Identify promising efforts to expand the human capital pipeline into education by strengthening and innovating the education professions.
- Implement research that identifies not only when strategies work, but also for whom and under what conditions with the goal of expanding and ensuring success for all students.
- Increase our understanding of the civic purpose of schooling and how the state, local, and national interact to establish and advance high-quality public education systems that powerfully serve students, families, communities, and democracy at large.
- Advance grantmaking aligned with program strategy and the Foundation's goal of expanding high-quality learning for all students.
- Manage a portfolio of grants, including design, implementation, monitoring, evaluation, and stewardship of financial and programmatic resources.
- Build and maintain strong relationships with grantees, partners, and leaders across the education field.
- Contribute content expertise, professional networks, intellectual curiosity, and cultural awareness to inform program strategy.
- Engage in national conversations on improving educational opportunities and share best practices related to impact, sustainability, and scalability.
- Work collaboratively within a highly collegial team, sharing plans and insights to strengthen alignment and learning.
- Develop and refine evaluation approaches; commission and manage third-party evaluations to test strategic assumptions and inform decision-making.
- Represent the Foundation externally at conferences, meetings, site visits, and foundation-hosted convenings.
- Collaborate with grantees to refine approaches, maximize resources, and advance program objectives.
- Prepare briefing materials, reports, presentations, blog posts, and other written materials to inform internal and external audiences.
- Support the implementation of an aspirational, outcomes-driven strategy focused on improving teaching, learning, and student experiences.
- Deep commitment to equitable, high-quality public education, supported by experience in education practice, policy, or system improvement;
- Significant experience working with education organizations and leaders, with a strong understanding of how to drive systemic change across classrooms, schools, and systems;
- Knowledge of leading-edge instructional practices, pedagogical trends, and contemporary research on teaching and learning;
- Experience supporting educators to improve practice, gained in settings such as philanthropy, school or system leadership, nonprofits, government, or community/state organizing;
- Prior classroom, building, or system-level (district, state, federal) leadership experience;
- Understanding of factors contributing to disparate educational outcomes and experience addressing equity issues in practice;
- Ability to lead and manage research or analytical projects related to grantmaking, including executing work with limited staff support;
- Demonstrated ability to set clear objectives, evaluate progress, and independently manage complex projects;
- Strong written and verbal communication skills;
- Commitment to collaboration and authentic partnership with colleagues, grantees, and field leaders;
- Alignment with Hewlett's Guiding Principles;
- Comfort working in a highly collaborative, relatively flat organizational structure, balancing autonomy with teamwork;
- Growth-oriented leadership style, including experience or interest in mentoring and supervising staff and working closely with embedded team members (grants, legal, communications);
- Adaptable, flexible, highly relational, and grounded in humility, integrity, and a positive, collegial spirit;
- Independent initiative, openness to diverse perspectives, and receptiveness to feedback;
- A graduate degree in a relevant field;
- Foundation grantmaking experience;
- Willingness to take smart risks and pursue outcomes-driven work; and
- Ability to work from the Hewlett Foundation's Menlo Park office.
Cati Mitchell-Crossley, Ebony Breaux-Liang, and Rachel Banderob Isaacson, Miller The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation embraces the importance of diversity, equity, and inclusion, both internally in our hiring process and organizational culture, and externally, in our grantmaking and related practices. We are an equal opportunity employer, and welcome applications from people of all backgrounds, cultures, and experiences. This document has been prepared based on the information provided by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The material presented in this leadership profile should be relied on for informational purposes only. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this information, the original source documents and information provided by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation would supersede any conflicting information in this document.
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