Our evaluation efforts also surfaced insights we did not initially set out to measure. And perhaps most importantly, we learned that ongoing evaluation, and evaluation capacity, itself is not extra. It is essential to an organization’s ability for continuous learning, and ultimately, responsiveness.
That is why Healing Through Arts and Nature is paired with the Impact Learning Labs from the Nonprofit Institute, which provides evaluation capacity to help organizations build the tools and practices they need to evaluate their work over time.
Taken together, they did not seem like incidental outcomes; they felt like signals.
So, we began to ask: What would it look like to bring these lessons together? What would it mean to support community work that connects mental, physical, and social health with arts and nature — not as “extras,” but as essential building blocks for well-being? And how could Prebys continue learning alongside our partners while also supporting their ability to measure, reflect on, and understand their own impact in ways that are meaningful to them?
Looking ahead, we are not simply deepening one initiative. We are advancing a larger hypothesis with community partners: that healing through arts and nature, when paired with an intentional focus on health, can function as an effective preventative framework — not only a treatment response. We believe this work can strengthen systems, reduce long-term costs, and expand what care looks like in community.
To this point, we continue to lean into learning partnerships with organizations like the Nonprofit Institute, the Natural History Museum, Social Rx, and the many committed nonprofit organizations leading this work. Together, we will continue to test, learn, and build the case for care that is rooted in community, creativity, nature, and connection.