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Increase your knowledge of processes involved in program evaluation Provide information and resources to help you design and conduct your own program evaluation |
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Why evaluate? What is evaluation? What does evaluation do? Kinds of evaluation |
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Determine program outcomes Identify program strengths Identify and improve weaknesses Justify use of resources Increased emphasis on accountability Professional responsibility to show effectiveness of program |
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Purposeful, systematic, and careful collection and analysis of information used for the purpose of documenting the effectiveness and impact of programs, establishing accountability, and identifying areas needing change and improvement |
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Looks at the results of your investment of time, expertise, and energy, and compares those results with what you said you wanted to achieve |
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Process Formative Impact Summative Outcome |
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Documents what the program is and to what extent it has been implemented |
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A new program is being introduced; identifies and defines the program; identifies what you are actually evaluating |
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Process evaluation: example |
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Who receives program, where is program operating; is it being implemented the same way at each site? |
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What short-term or immediate effect did the program have? |
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Collect data for evaluation at the beginning and end of program to ID changes (pre-post data collection) |
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Impact evaluation: example |
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Collecting pre-post data on knowledge change, changes in health service utilization, policy changes, or other data |
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Identifies the results or effects of a program |
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You want to measure students’ or clients’ knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors as a result of a program |
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Outcome evaluation: example |
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Did program increase achievement, reduce truancy, create better decision-making? |
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Conducted during Process Evaluation As the program is happening to make changes as program is being implemented |
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Conducted during Impact Evaluation At the end of a program to document results |
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The evaluative process (4) |
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Planning Development Implementation Feedback |
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Step 1: Define Purpose & Scope |
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Why are you doing the evaluation? Mandatory? Program outcomes? Program improvement? What is the scope? How large will the effort be? Large/Small; Broad/Narrow How complex is the proposed evaluation? Many variables, many questions? What can you realistically accomplish? |
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Resources $$ Staff Who can assist? Need to bring in expertise? Do it yourself? Advisory team? Time Set priorities How you will use the information |
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What is it that you want to know about your program? Operationalize it (make it measurable) Do not move forward if you cannot answer this question. |
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Strategic plans Mission statements Policies Needs assessment Goals and objectives National standards and guidelines |
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Identifying Evidence Needed to Answer Questions |
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What evidence do you have to answer your question? Need to think about what information you need in order to answer your evaluation questions |
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Specify Evaluation Design |
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Relates to when data should be collected Types of Designs Decide what type of design fits each question |
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Status (here and now; snapshot) Comparison (group A vs. group B; program A vs. program B) Change (what happened as a result of a program; what differences are there between time A and time B) Longitudinal (what happens over extended time) |
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Components of Data Collection Action Plan |
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What Will be Collected? Based on evidence required How Collected? Instrumentation Surveys? Published instrument? Focus group? Observations? From Whom Collected? Who or what provides evidence When Collected and by Whom? Specific dates, times, persons How Data are to be Analyzed? |
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Students Parents Teachers Counselors Employers Friends Documents and other records |
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Commercial instrument Survey/questionnaire Focus group/interviews Observations Archived information |
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Sometimes best to use published or research instruments Why??? Particularly for tough constructs Since its not made specifically for you, may not answer your question entirely |
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Self-Constructed Instruments Questionnaires |
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Focus on evidence you need Use simple language Ask only what you need; keep it short Don’t use jargon Each question should focus on one idea Make sure terms are clear Make it easy for person to answer the questions (check rather than write, where possible) Use extended response when you want details |
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Self-Constructed Instruments Focus Groups / Interviews |
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Good to use when you want extended and detailed responses Craft an agenda and stick to it Keep groups small (6-10); time short (1-1.5 hours) Specify objectives of session Questions need to be clear; one question at a time Encourage everyone to participate Use opportunity to probe deeper on a topic |
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Data: Archives & Documents |
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examine whats already available |
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How much data should you collect? 100% of target audience is ideal; may be too expensive and time consuming If not 100%, sample is OK if group is representative of group as a whole (population) |
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Data collected during program evaluation are compiled and analyzed (counting; number crunching) Inferences are drawn as to why some results occurred and others did not Can be very complex depending on your evaluation questions We will focus on simple things that can be done without expert consultants |
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Descriptive data analyses Used to describe, classify, and summarize data E.g. Mean, median, mode What was the average score on the cholesterol knowledge test? |
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Measures of relationship or correlation Establish a relationship between 2 variables E.g. ANOVA, Chi Square Do students’ attitudes about bicycle helmets differ in rural and urban settings? |
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Multivariate Data Analysis |
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Multiple analyses are used to determine relationships between more than 2 variables Multiple Regression Can the risk of heart disease be predicted using smoking, exercise, diet, and heredity? |
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Examine results carefully and objectively Draw conclusions based on your data What do the results signify about your program? |
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What to include in documentation |
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Program description Evaluation questions Methodology (how and from whom and when) Response rate Methods of analysis Conclusions listed by evaluation question General conclusions and findings Action items Recommendations for program improvement and change |
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Document Successes and Shortfalls |
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Highlight and brag about positive outcomes Document shortfalls Provides opportunities to Improve program Make recommendations to benefit the program |
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Determine disseminating methods Inform all your relevant stakeholders on results Dissemination methods should differ by your target audience |
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Your program staff Businesses Partners that work with your program Employers School Level School administrators Counselors Teachers Students Parents Media Local newspaper TV station Radio program Community or school newsletter Education Researchers Members of Community or faith based organizations Church members Religious leaders Rotary club Boys or girls club Anyone who participated in your evaluation! |
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Reports Journal articles Conferences CRN newsletter/tabloids Presentations Brochures TV and newspaper interviews Executive summary Posting on Web site |
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Feedback for Program Improvement |
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Evaluation results may show areas where improvement is necessary Opportunity to fix shortfalls
- 25% of 11th graders are unable to complete a skills based resume - 85% of our students drop out of college in the first year - Most employers do not want your students to serve an interns in their companies |
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You can use evaluation findings to make program improvements |
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Consider adjustments Re-examine/revise program strategies Change programs or methodologies Increase time with the program Use your results as a needs assessment for future efforts |
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Determine the effects of the program on recipients Know if you have reached your objectives Improve your program |
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