Title: Managing for Results CommunityBased Abstinence Education Grantees Conference
1Managing for Results Community-Based Abstinence
Education Grantees Conference
Vijaya ChannahSorah, Ph.D. ACF
Performance Management Operations
2Managing for Results
- Uses logic modeling to relate
- gt tracking program implementation
- gt measuring outputs and outcomes
- gt budgeting
- gt planning research/evaluation priorities
- The purpose is to improve program outcomes and
service to program recipients.
3The World a few Years ago
- Focus on incremental budgeting
- traditional management
- Focus on reporting processes and outputs
4Traditional Budgeting
- Focus on inputs, such as increased funding,
rather than outcomes - Changes in inputs at the margin (for example, X
more dollars than last year will fund x more
grants)
5The World of Managing for Results
- Strategic Planning
- Performance Budgeting
- Performance Measurement / Reporting
- PART
- Presidents Management Agenda (PMA)
- Perform. Accountability Rept.
- Research / Program Evaluation
- Logic Modeling to link
- all these (how the puzzle fits) !
6A New Way of Budgeting
- Budget/performance information is integrated
for the first time in 2006 into the
Congressional budget request - Budget justifications include discussions of
goals, measures, and performance - Budget submissions include PART recommendations
for program and management improvement and how
those findings influenced budget decisions - Example 500,000 was included in LIHEAP request
for feasibility study for national evaluation
(PART recom.)
7What Does this Mean forProgram Funding?
- Bottom Line Program effectiveness may affect
budget decisions - Reduced funds, or in some cases no funding, might
be requested for poor performers - High performing programs might have a better
opportunity to garner additional funds - Example Refugee program demonstrated
significant improvements in refugee employment
which reinforced ORR request for 68M
8PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- Key outcome performance measures for programs
- Output measures
- Key efficiency measures
- Program Assessment Rating Tool results
- Research and Evaluation
9How Performance Information is Integrated into
Budget Request
- Performance information (including PART results)
is now included in - - the Overview in the Budget Request and
- - each programs section of Budget Request
- ALL the ACF detailed Performance Information
(tables, data issues, etc.) included in the
performance budget as well.
10Challenges in Performance Management
- Defining efficiency for human services programs
(e.g., abstinence education) - Defining outcomes (e.g., family violence
prevention) - Timely, reliable data
11Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART)
- 25 questions about
- Program Purpose Design (20)
- Strategic Planning (10)
- Program Management (20)
- Program Results (50)
- And approximately 5 supplemental questions
tailored to the type of program, e.g., grant,
direct service delivery, research, etc. - Ratings can be Inadequate, Results not
Demonstrated, Adequate, Moderately Effective, or
Effective
12Program Assessment Rating Tool
- PART experience 22 of our ACF programs have
participated in PART - FY 2004 3 programs
- Head Start, Foster Care, Refugee Resettlement
(Social Services and Targeted Assistance Formula
Grants) - Scores ranged from 37 to 68 (RND to Adequate)
- FY 2005 5 programs
- CSBG, LIHEAP, Child Support, ADD, RHY
- Scores ranged from 35 to 93 Foster Care was
reassessed, increased from 33 to 54 - FY 2006 6 programs
- AFI, CAPTA, CBCAP, Child Care, Indep Living, VCR
- Scores ranged from 39 to 81 (Ratings RND to
Moderately Effective)
13Program Assessment Rating Tool
- FY 2007 8 programs
- - ORR/TAMS - effective
- - ORR/Human Trafficking, Adoption
Assistance, TANF - moderately effective - - Adoption Incentives Adoption
Opportunities adequate - - Mentoring Children of Prisoners SSBG
results not demonstrated - Abstinence Education might be PARTed this year
14Research and Program Evaluation
- Outcome measurement can show
- Trends in outcomes
- Comparisons between actual and desired outcomes
- Rigorous evaluation can show
- Outcomes relative to what they would have been in
the absence of the program - The programs causal contribution to the observed
outcome
15 16Overview of Logic Models
- A logic model tracks how we get from our
challenges to our solutions and desired long term
outcomes
CHALLENGE
INPUTS
ACTIVITIES
OUTPUTS
DEMOGRAPHICS
LONG TERM OUTCOMES (GOALS)
OUTCOMES
EXT. FACTORS
CONSTRAINTS
ASSUMPTIONS
17Logic Model Defined
- What is a Logic Model?
- A graphic representation of a program.
- It shows what the program is designed to
accomplish, including the services it delivers,
expected results of those services, and the
linkages between services and program goals.
18Logic Model Formal Definition
- A logic model is a picture of how your
organization does or plans to do its work it
links outcomes (both short and long term) with
program activities/processes and the theoretical
assumptions/principles of a program
19Logic Models
- can go both ways
- X -------------------------------------------
--?Y - (e.g., how can we make a raft float?)
- X lt- ----------------------------------------
----Y - (e.g., why did the raft sink?)
20Logic Model Uses
- Use for program
- Design
- Budgeting
- Implementation
- Evaluation
- Communication
- Marketing
- So a logic model can be used to help plan a
program, to help manage a program, and to guide
the evaluation of a program.
21Logic Model Construction Process
- Model Development
- Think about what it is that you are really trying
to do - Establish the scope and context
- Determine challenge(s), outcomes, inputs,
activities, outputs, and measurement components - Create model draft
- Express relationships among/between key
components - Determine evaluation needs/points using dotted
line arrows (solid arrows show known
relationships)
22Logic Model Development
- 1. Identify CHALLENGE/Social ill What do we want
to improve in the population? - Out of wedlock births
- Relationships before marriage
- Diseases (STDs)
- Challenges are often expressed as statements of
fact, based on empirical data/statistics. - There may be multiple challenges addressed by a
single program.
23Logic Model Development
- 2. Identify LONG-TERM OUTCOMES The ultimate end
goals of your program, how your service
population will look after your interventions
have taken place - Decrease out of wedlock births
- Increase proportion of abstinent youths
- Decrease preventable disease (STDs)
- Long-term outcomes/goals (as well as all other
outcomes) are usually expressed as changes you
will use words such as improved, increased,
decreased, etc. - Ultimate long-term outcomes/goals are sometimes
pie in the sky or utopian.
24Logic Model Development
- The remainder of the logic model elaborates how
we get from the CHALLENGE to the LONG TERM
OUTCOMES.
CHALLENGE
INPUTS
ACTIVITIES
OUTPUTS
DEMOGRAPHICS
LONG TERM OUTCOMES (GOALS)
OUTCOMES
EXT. FACTORS
CONSTRAINTS
ASSUMPTIONS
25Logic Model Development
- 3. Identify Inputs/Resources (personnel, funds,
laws/regulations, creative ideas, etc.) - 4. Identify Activities
- Train the trainer
- Delivering abstinence education in churches,
community centers, schools
26Logic Model Development
- 5. Identify Outputs, such as number of trainers
trained, number of training courses developed and
administered. - 6. Identify/develop Key Outcomes and Measures
- Decrease the rate of births to unmarried teenage
girls ages 15-19 (35.4 in 2002) Target 35 in
2003 - Decrease the proportion of youth ages 15-19 who
have engaged in sexual intercourse (46.7 in
2003) Target 45.5 for 2004 - and set Targets
27Logic Model Development
- 7. Determine where program evaluation/research
needs to take place (and depict arrows
accordingly) - - - - - - - gt plausible causal
relationship (or desired effects/results) - ----------? known causal
relationship (based on scientific
research/program evaluation)
28Logic Model Development
- Complementary Tools
- Strategic plans
- Flowcharts
- Process diagrams
- Related logic models
- Performance budgets containing global Agency
performance measure information
29Linking ! How does all this relate?
- Results Act (requires performance measurement
reporting in the Performance Budget) - PMA (requires integrating this performance with
budget requests and with financial reporting) - PART (very detailed analysis of Agency
management, measurement, reporting) - Logic Modeling (gives a clear picture of what
outcome measures needed, program evaluation
needed, etc.)
30In Conclusion
- ACF is increasingly focusing on results
- We have lots of information! how do we assemble
it to help us manage? - Use Logic Modeling to track and improve
performance at Federal, state, and grantee levels
31Questions / Discussion
- Questions on any aspect of Managing by Results?
- Is it clear how all aspects relate to one another
and how logic modeling can be used as a powerful
tool?