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What is Evaluation?. David Dwayne Williams Brigham Young University David_Williams@byu.edu. Evaluation, Assessment, Measurement, and Research. Evaluation usually includes describing what is and what should be, then judging or comparing the two, as in a balance.
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What is Evaluation? David Dwayne WilliamsBrigham Young UniversityDavid_Williams@byu.edu
Evaluation, Assessment, Measurement, and Research • Evaluation usually includes describing • what is and • what should be, then • judging or comparing the two, as in a balance. • Measurement is an essential tool for gathering information about what is. John Brown example. • Assessments involve using measurement processes regularly for established purposes. • Research involves measuring what is, then seeking to understand and explain, not to judge.
Vocational Rehabilitation Examples • Utah Statewide ASSESSMENT of the Rehabilitation Needs of Individuals with Disabilities 2006-07: Final Report. • Michael Leahy’s presentation yesterday on a synergistic program evaluation MODEL PARTNERSHIP • From the announcement of this conference: “consumer satisfaction studies, surveys, case file reviews, comprehensive needs assessments, economic impact studies, and use of other quality assurance measures.” • Program Evaluation and Justification Review of the Rehabilitation Program Administered by the Department of Labor and Employment Security, Report No. 98-04, July 1998
Vocational Rehabilitation Evaluation • Has a long history in the literature (I found resources from the 1970’s forward). • However, as in many fields, evaluations may turn out to be assessments, measures, or research rather than full evaluation. • Let’s look at what the field of evaluation says about evaluation and then we can decide whether Vocational Rehabilitation might gain from what they offer…
An Evaluation Framework based on Ideas From Several Theorists • Alkin, 2004 • Fetterman, 2001 • Guba & Lincoln, 1989 • Patton, 2002, 2008 • Stake, 2004 • Stufflebeam, 2001, 2007 • Weiss, 1998 • Fitzpatrick, Sanders, & Worthen, 2003
Evaluation Framework Overview Evaluation Checklist Program Evaluations Meta-Evaluation Checklist • Background Information • Audience & Stakeholders • Evaluand Information • Stakeholder Concerns • Judging Criteria • Questions to Answer • Data Collection Processes • Data Analysis • Reporting Strategies • Results • Recommendations • Resource Valuation • Budget and Schedule • Self-Critique using meta-evaluation • Overview • Meeting Requirements for Utility • Meeting Requirements of Feasibility • Meeting Requirements for Propriety • Meeting Requirements for Accuracy
Context for understanding an Evaluation • What does the literature associated with the evaluand say are the key issues? • How did this evaluand come to be of interest to you? • What is your background that is relevant to this evaluation? • What evaluation has been done on this evaluand already? • Is the evaluand evaluable at present? • Why is an evaluation appropriate now? • What approaches to evaluation were considered and which will be used and why? 7
Possible VR Context Questions • What does the literature about Vocational Rehabilitation say ought to be included in a study? • How did this program or this counseling technique or this client come to be of interest to you? • What perspectives are you taking on this evaluation because of your particular background? • What might you be missing because of that? • What alternative views do you need to insist on including, besides your own? • What evaluation have you or others already done on this evaluand? • What has been learned from previous evaluations?
Who are the stakeholders who care? Why? • Who asked for the evaluation and why? • Who stands to benefit from the evaluation and how? • Who is served by the evaluand or should be? • Who is likely to use the evaluation results to do something helpful? • Who does not usually have a voice in matters associated with the evaluand but has a stake in it? 9
VR evaluators might ask about stakeholders: • Who else besides me cares about this treatment, these resources, or this program? • Have any of them asked for an evaluation? • If so, why? If not, why not? • Why do I and these other people care about this program? • What do we stand to lose or gain by what happens with this program? • Who else is served by this program or should be and therefore should have an interest in its evaluation? • Are the administrators, other counselors, family members, employers, or others likely to use evaluation results to do something different?
What is the evaluand or “thing” the stakeholders care about? • What do you already know about the evaluand? • What or Who it is • What its or their objectives are • How it works or what they are doing • What more do you need to learn to refine the description and definition of the evaluand so you can focus your evaluation on it or them? 11
What are the “things” or people VR evaluators might evaluate? • One key evaluand may be them as counselors, • Or it may be the curriculum or program they’re using, • Or a particular technique they are piloting, • Their clients’ current performance, employment, concerns, and associated needs for improvement, • The relationships among several components of a program. • Or a test used to ascertain growth in client performance?
What criteria do stakeholders have for judging the evaluand? • What values do the stakeholders manifest regarding the evaluand? • What do they think the evaluand should be accomplishing (criteria for success)? • What standards do they have or how completely do they hope the evaluand will meet the criteria? • How will they know when the evaluand is successful to their satisfaction? 13
VR evaluators might ask these criteria questions: • What do we and other stakeholders value that should guide our evaluation efforts? • What should clients who participate in this program activity be able to do when they finish? • How well should clients perform on the selected criteria if the program is going to be considered successful? • What should counselors be doing, at what level of performance to help clients be successful?
What questions do stakeholders want to answer? • Based on the previous points, what evaluation questions should be asked? • Based on a rating or ranking of all possible questions raised, which are the highest priorities? • Which questions will this study address and why? 15
VR evaluators might ask these questions to match the criteria: • How are clients performing compared to the ideal? • Is there a need for an intervention change? • How well was the program implemented? • How many of the clients performed at or above 80% on the job placement test? • How well did this counselor do in preparing their clients to apply for a job? • How well are we evaluating our interventions in terms of implementation and outcome?
What processes will be used to collect & analyze data to answer the questions & compare the evaluand to it’s criteria? • For each question listed earlier, what: • Information will be collected & analyzed? • Using what data collection procedures? • By whom and when? • How will each procedure be refined to ensure validity, reliability, credibility, trustworthiness, etc. 17
VR evaluators may collect & analyze quantitative or qualitative data by: • Drawing upon formal measures developed by others or creating their own tests and performance activities, • Conducting informal interviews and observations, • Engaging clients in dialogues & digitally recording them for analysis by the clients or others, • Analyzing these and other data both qualitatively & quantitatively, • Comparing these descriptions of “what is” to the criteria and standards identified earlier.
What reporting & recommendation strategies will be used? • What interim reports will be given to whom and when? • What final reports will be given to whom and when? • How will the reports be organized, around what points? • Will there be oral reports? Written reports? Other formats? • How will results be organized and displayed? • What are the results or what results are anticipated? • Where will recommendations come from? • Will you be qualified to make recommendations and why? • What recommendations are there, who should implement them and how? 19
VR evaluators report results and recommendations through the use of • Informal oral reports for own program evaluations, • Interim reports to share with others, • Formal written reports with charts and tables, • Reports on study progress & stakeholder involvement, • Implications for future evaluation activities, • Evaluative judgments about quality of evaluands, • Realistic recommendations- using processes that involve the stakeholders who will implement the recommendations.
Metaevaluation of Evaluation Plans, Implementation, & Outcomes • Encourages high quality evaluations • Can be done internally or externally • Could involve Standards established by the Joint Committee of thoughtful professionals • Seeks to enhance evaluation quality in terms of: • Utility • Feasibility • Propriety • Accuracy
VR evaluators should meta-evaluate to enhance quality: • When anticipating conducting an evaluation, • While conducting one, and/or • While reviewing evaluations performed by themselves or others. • Using Joint Committee standards to help clarify what they want to evaluate, • Using the Standards to judge how well they are evaluating, • By clarifying who they are serving with their evaluation, and how they value the results of their evaluation efforts.
Implications for VR Participants • Use Measurement and Assessment in a broader Evaluation context to enhance VR programs by: • Attending to context, background and literature • Serving the values & interests of all stakeholders • Involving stakeholders in clarifying the evaluand, criteria, & standards they care most about • Targeting stakeholders’ questions with a variety of data collection and analysis methods that involve measures of high quality to assess how well “what is” matches up with “what should be” for the stakeholders • Sharing results and recommendations that are realistic and useful for the stakeholders in ways they can use.
Come Learn More This Afternoon at a Workshop. We will: • Review the evaluation framework presented here • Discuss the premise that measurement and assessment are means for doing evaluation and research • Discuss and write down current practices and questions about evaluating your work activities. • Develop plans for applying these ideas to your practice • Share emerging plans with other participants for feedback • Receive guidance and feedback from presenter • Accept the challenge to apply this plan at home and to contact the presenter with questions and further guidance if wanted.
For more information or questions, Contact: David Williams 150 G MCKB Brigham Young University Provo, UT 84602 USA David_Williams@byu.edu