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Increasing Evaluation Transparency: A Dialogue Strategy. Sheila A. Arens June, 2003. Context: Educational Rhetoric. Movement toward “evidence-based” Accountability for public monies US: reauthorization of ESEA (Jan ’02) Canada, Europe
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Increasing Evaluation Transparency: A Dialogue Strategy Sheila A. Arens June, 2003
Context: Educational Rhetoric • Movement toward “evidence-based” • Accountability for public monies • US: reauthorization of ESEA (Jan ’02) • Canada, Europe • But how transparent are evaluation findings? Or how well do we communicate findings to (or with) broader constituencies?
Evaluative Findings On Stage • In research, positive results are more likely to be published in academic journals – positive bias • In evaluation, findings are sometimes shelved or disregarded • Why? Propriety; dismissive of findings (fail use or validity tests), do not resonate with beleifs • Other instances where evaluation is prematurely given “top fold” status
Paradox: Too much information? • While public attention to educational research and evaluation findings over the past several decades, public faith in education and in its research has decreased (Heath, 1999) • What is our responsibility for making our work transparent? What role ought evaluation serve? • Ethical / moral questions • Should transparency be contingent and relative? • Should transparency underlie all work?
Participatory Evaluation • Capacity to increase transparency; openness / democracy • But evaluators have differential understandings of “participatory” • Emancipatory; transformative; utilitarian • Depth vs. breadth of inclusion • Considerations are moral / ethical
Strategy for Public Engagement • Strategies pursued as data collection efforts or throughout the evaluation? • Strategies for gathering community input: • Surveys, polls • Interviews • Focus groups • Engaged /deliberative dialogue
Deliberative Approaches: Rationale • Wanted approach that constructively engaged & was inclusive (reflected democratic commitments) • Reasoned conversations/ deliberative dialogue: approach that enables positions & contrasting ideologies to surface and be co-explored • Encourages participants to consider collective & personal roles w/ respect to social problems & solutions
Example: Educational Standards Through engaged dialogue, we sought to uncover: • The public’s perception of standards-based education, and • The extent to which the public would support low performing schools
Methods • Conversations with groups of citizens convened • Participants represented wide array of stakeholder groups • Used conversation framework to initiate • Field notes, video tapes and observations collected
Data Analyses • Analysis: notes & videos • analytic inductive process: separately reviewed, formulated tentative assertions based on emerging themes • Compared assertions & sought disconfirming evidence
Findings • Initially common perceptions (large-scale survey findings) reflected • However, conversations led to participants more carefully examining their own assumptions about what is meant by: • Standards • Assessment • Accountability
(con’t) • Support standards, assessment, accountability • Accountability measures: Reliable? Valid? • Current accountability fails to address concerns • Acknowledged myriad (external) factors • Saliency of non-academic issues • Support for LPS [in principle]
Engagement Toward Understanding • Large-scale evaluations grounded in surveys: • Fail to reveal nuances of perceptions • but also fail to engage participants toward increased understanding of own, others’ and commonly held ideological positions / stances emerged • Public awareness increased along with ability to understand and engage in conversations
Next Steps?? • Initial dialogues can help shape evaluative outcomes (in present case, relative to educational standards & accountability) • Add’l research: extent to which participants… • Are more informed & engaged • Are better positioned: policy discussions & decisions • Better understand: evaluation processes, influence evaluation questions, understand evaluation outcomes