Donor Stories
Estate Note Helps Realize Vision
For 30 years, Dr. Tom Johnson
'56 devoted his professional
life to advancing the cause of
medical education, as a professor
at Michigan State University's
College of Human Medicine and
as dean of the University of North
Dakota School of Medicine.
At Michigan State, he helped
pioneer a problem-based approach
to learning, in place of the rote
memorization that had been the
dominant paradigm when he was
in medical school. In North Dakota,
he led a complete overhaul of the
academic program, converting
a two-year program into a fouryear,
degree-granting school.
As his 50th Wooster reunion
approached, Tom wanted to
find a way to support what he
considered the most important
aspects of undergraduate
education: the quality of the
student body, the quality of
the faculty, and the flexibility,
responsiveness, and creativity of
the academic program.
The more he thought about it,
the more he became convinced
that endowing a fund for
curricular innovation would
help strengthen all three areas
at once. He envisioned a fund,
administered by the vice president
for academic affairs, that would
provide intellectual venture capital
to support the development of
new academic programs and
course offerings that promote
critical inquiry, problem solving,
new teaching methods, and
interdisciplinary work.
"Faculty are creative people and
with some seed money, they can
come up with novel ideas on how
to better educate their students,"
he said.
Tom and his wife, Jane, made an
initial gift to launch the fund, but
creating an endowment sufficient
to fully realize their vision was a
daunting prospect. Then, through
his work with the 50th reunion
planning committee, Tom learned
about a planned giving vehicle that
could help them do just that: an
Estate Note.
An Estate Note is an irrevocable
debt against the donor's estate that
may be designated for a specific
purpose, such as scholarships,
library funds, professorships, or
academic programs. While there
is no obligation to transfer assets
during the donor's lifetime, any
payments that are made against
the Note can provide income-tax
deductions up to the full amount
permitted by the IRS. And payment
of the balance of the Note after the
donor's death provides a charitable
deduction for the estate.
"We found it to be a really
good solution," Tom said. "I had
considered an annuity, but it
wasn't right for my situation."'
The full face value of the
Note counted toward both the
class of 1956's reunion gift
and the Independent Minds
Campaign total.
While the Johnsons' generous
gift has gotten the ball rolling,
they hope others will also be
drawn to the new Fund for
Curricular Innovation.
"That's the reason I refused to
put my name on it," Tom says.
"I'm just providing the seed
money. I hope others who share
these interests will contribute, too."
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