Evaluation models
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Author
Contributions
- American Evaluation Association. - Contributor
Publication
2001 - Jossey-Bass, San Francisco
Language
English
Word Count
26,500 words, Guess
Page Count
106 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archiveevaluationmodels0000stuf
- ISBN-100787957550
- ISBN-139780787957551
- OCLC Control Number46681703
- Better World Books9780787957551
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL18728775M
Classifications
- LCCH61 .S784
Description
"Faced with a growing array of program evaluation approaches, evaluators should periodically take stock of their options. In this spirit, this monograph identifies, analyzes, and judges twenty-two evaluation approaches thought to cover most program evaluation efforts. Two approaches - labeled Pseudoevaluations - are politically oriented and often used illegitimately to misrepresent a program's value. The remaining twenty are judged to be legitimate and categorized for their orientations as Questions/ Methods, Improvement/Accountability, and Social Agenda/Advocacy. The best and most applicable approaches were judged to be Client-Centered/Responsive, Utilization-Focused, Decision/Accountability, Consumer-Oriented, Constructivist, Deliberative Democratic, Case Study, Outcome/Value Added Assessment, and Accreditation. The approaches judged least defensible or least useful include Public Relations, Politically Controlled, Accountability (especially payment by results), Clarification Hearing, and Program Theory-Based. The rest - including Objectives-Based, Experimental Studies, Management Information Systems, Criticism and Connoisseurship, Mixed Methods, Benefit-Cost Analysis, Performance Testing, and Objective Testing Programs - were judged to have restricted, though beneficial program evaluation applications. No evaluation approach is always best, and my analysis is intended to assist evaluators to choose that one or combination of approaches that best fits particular evaluation assignments. The approaches were judged for adherence to professional standards for evaluations. The employed standards-based, metaevaluation checklist is referenced, so that interested parties can examine its validity and/or apply it themselves. In introducing this issue, the co-editor of New Directions for Evaluation invites readers to study, discuss, critique, and/or build upon my analyses and judgments, and especially to consider which approaches work best in which circumstances. I join Dr. Henry in his invitation and look forward to productive exchanges with AEA members and others on how best to strengthen evaluators' choices and uses of evaluation approaches."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Series Statement
- New directions for evaluation -- no. 89.
Other Editions
- Evaluation models
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