Shoshanah D. Goldberg

Shoshanah D. Goldberg has more than twenty years of experience as a senior administrator, fundraiser, consultant, and educator in the nonprofit sector. She has been director of Greenwich House Pottery and acting director of the Museum of Holography, and has also raised funds for renowned healthcare organizations, universities, youth agencies, and museums including American Cancer Society, March of Dimes, Police Athletic League, The Paley Center for Media, and The American Museum of Natural History. As a consultant, Goldberg has counseled Polaroid, National Geographic, Children’s Television Workshop, Publicolor, and Socrates Sculpture Park, as well as numerous individuals, not-for-profits and community-based organizations. For more than eight years, Goldberg has taught fundraising and grant writing at the graduate level. She is a Part-Time Assistant Professor at The Milano School of International Affairs, Management and Urban Policy at The New School, where she teaches courses on arts management & cultural policy, fundraising and grant writing. She also teaches graduate classes at Hunter College's Urban Affairs and Planning and Columbia's School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Goldberg has been a featured speaker at conferences including Fundraising Day in New York and the Faith Based Conference on Economic Development, and lectures regularly on fundraising and sponsorship at industry seminars and conferences. A graduate of University of Michigan, Goldberg holds a B.F.A. in ceramics and M.B.A. in arts administration from SUNY Binghamton, and is currently a Ph.D. candidate in Public and Urban Policy at Milano The New School for Management and Urban Policy. Goldberg’s doctoral research, funded by The Rockefeller Foundation, focuses on the relationship between cultural policy and economic development in Toronto and New York. Goldberg teaches Foundations of Fundraising and Development. 

Shoshanah Goldberg teaches Foundations of Fundraising and Development.