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The GOSAP Social Indicators Project

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Title: The GOSAP Social Indicators Project


1
The GOSAPSocial Indicators Project
  • Collaborating with Data
  • to Enhance
  • Virginias Prevention Efforts

2
Why are we doing the Social Indicators Project?
  • The Social Indicators Project supports 7 of the
    Core Elements developed by the SIG Advisory
    Council
  • Evidence-based Practice
  • Promoting the use of, and building the capacity
    for, evidence-based practice
  • Environmental Change
  • Increasing the focus on the shared environment
    related to community norms, regulations, policies
    and data collection

3
Why are we doing the Social Indicators Project?
  • Collaboration
  • Establishing organized prevention partnerships at
    the state and local levels to foster consistent
    planning
  • Resources Development
  • Provides data to justify securing a consistent
    and efficiently integrated funding stream for
    substance abuse prevention efforts

4
Why are we doing the Social Indicators Project?
  • Legislative Issues
  • Provides data to enact public policies that
    clearly reflect what research shows to be
    effective in promoting successful outcomes in
    substance abuse prevention
  • Advocacy
  • Provides data to foster prevention advocacy
    development at the local and state levels
  • Public Awareness
  • Provides data to heighten awareness of prevention
    goals, messages and initiatives at the local,
    state and national levels

5
What is Virginias Social Indicator Project?
  • Common language
  • We are seeking agreement from state agencies and
    interested others on what social indicators
    should be
  • accepted by all agencies in grant/funding
    applications and plans and
  • routinely collected and posted on the GOSAP
    Website.
  • We are seeking common definitions for all social
    indicators to be used.

6
What is Virginias Social Indicator Project?
  • Data base
  • We are working to collect agreed upon social
    indicators into a web-based data base
  • city/county level data at a minimum
  • statewide comparison
  • multiple years
  • raw data, percentages, rates, ranks
  • updated annually

7
What is Virginias Social Indicator Project?
  • Youth Survey Data
  • Data from the existing Youth Survey and the
    Tobacco Use Survey also will be included
  • The Current limited number of respondents does
    not allow complete reporting at the city/county
    level.

8
What is Virginias Social Indicator Project?
  • Training
  • Training materials for how to use the data
    contained in the data base will be developed and
    should be available in a variety of venues,
    potentially
  • GOSAP sponsored Prevention Basics training
  • State training and technical assistance
    professionals and
  • Possible contracted trainers.

9
Where we want to go next
  • Benchmarking
  • We hope to be able to use the social indicator
    data to set benchmarks for where we want to be,
    statewide, on prevention initiatives.
  • Collaborating together, we can target our efforts
    and improve the well-being of children and youth
    in Virginia.

10
Where we want to go next
  • Evidence-based Programs
  • We also want to promote the use of evidence-based
    programs statewide by
  • providing information on practices that work
  • targeting resources to these practices and
  • disseminating on Virginias evidence-based
    programs though the GOSAP Website

11
Where we want to go next
  • Making it all work together
  • Data
  • Collected
  • How to analyze and understand it
  • How to tell the story and market it
  • Making research accessible
  • What outcomes can be changed?
  • What is most effective in making them change?
  • What degree of change can you make?10

12
What are Social Indicators?
  • Social Indicators are measures of change in
    conditions or behaviors.
  • They can tell us about the outcome of a policy,
    project or effort (policy/criterion) about
    peoples subjective feelings of well-being (life
    satisfaction/happiness) or document the state of
    conditions or behaviors over time (descriptive).
    1
  • They are selected specifically to relate to our
    values and goals.
  • They frequently are reported as rates or
    percentages so that they can be compared over
    time. 7

13
Why are Social Indicators Important?
  • Social Indicators are important because they
    provide a scientific basis for informing policy.
  • Social Indicators provide real data, rather than
    anecdote, to inform our discussions and
    decisions.4
  • Social Indicators can inform program development
    and administration.
  • Social Indicators can inform resource allocation.6

14
What can Social Indicators do?
  • Describe
  • Social Indicators can describe the state or
    condition of an area of interest.
  • Social Indicators can show trends, both positive
    and negative, in those areas of interest.
  • Social Indicators can be viewed for separate
    parts of the population (such as particular
    income levels or races) to help us target
    resources.2

15
What can Social Indicators do?
  • Monitor
  • Social Indicators can be looked at over time,
    highlighting areas of concern that may need
    special attention or areas of improvement in
    which were doing well.
  • Social Indicators can be available quickly to
    improve and inform policy and efforts.
  • Social Indicators can inform policy to promote
    positive improvement.2
  • Social Indicators can be collected on all members
    of the population affected by a policy or
    program.

16
What can Social Indicators do?
  • Set Goals
  • Social Indicators can be used to identify a
    baseline for where we are and a benchmark for
    where we want to be.
  • Social Indicators can reflect the values of the
    society that uses them. 2
  • Social Indicators can be used to help coordinate
    and manage activities across agencies and
    organizations.6

17
What can Social Indicators do?
  • Hold Accountable
  • Social Indicators can be used to document the
    outcomes of policies, projects and efforts.
  • Changes in the indicators may be sanctioned
    negatively or positively. 2
  • Social Indicators can be used to identify
    promising (or non-promising) practices for more
    further evaluation.6
  • Note social indicators do not tell us the
    underlying causes for changeso the reason for
    change may not be under the control of those
    being held accountable. 2

18
What can Social Indicators not do?
  • Social Indicators are no substitute for sound
    evaluation.
  • Social Indicators do not explain the causes of
    change, they simply show change.
  • Social Indicators do not identify all the factors
    that may have influenced change. 2

19
What makes a goodSocial Indicator?
  • Social Indicators need to measure the correct
    population.
  • If youre identifying issues for girls, use only
    age appropriate girls.
  • Social Indicators need to measure the correct
    geographical level.
  • If youre looking at your locality, use local
    level (not national or state level data.
  • Social Indicators need to accurately measure what
    you are trying to change.
  • If you are trying to promote change in families,
    you need to measure outcomes for both children
    and parents.2
  • Social Indicators should be grounded in
    scientific research and theory.10

20
How do I choose whichSocial Indicators to use?
  • Indicators should be comprehensive they should
    measure a range of conditions and behaviors such
    as health, mental health, education, etc.
  • Indicators should be age-appropriate measures
    should be included for pre-school (0-5),
    school-aged (6-11) and adolescent (12-17)
    children as they have different needs.
  • Indicators should be easily understandable by the
    general public.3

21
How do I choose whichSocial Indicators to use?
  • Indicators should cover a range of outcomes, both
    positive and negative (risk and protective
    factors).
  • Indicators should take into account the duration
    and the interaction of multiple years or factors
    that impact an outcome.
  • Indicators should mean the same thing across
    different populations.3

22
How do I choose whichSocial Indicators to use?
  • Indicators should mean the same thing across time
    so that they will be comparable.
  • Indicators should anticipate future issues so
    that they can serve as baselines for future
    years.
  • Indicators should be collected with the same
    degree of scientific rigor over time.
  • Indicators should be collected at various
    geographic levels (national, state, local or even
    neighborhood).3

23
How do I choose whichSocial Indicators to use?
  • Indicators should be economical so that the cost
    of collecting them will not interfere with their
    on-going collection.
  • Indicators should reflect our values and
    goalswhat is important to usso that we can
    track our progress in meeting them.
  • Indicators should be collected so that they can
    be viewed for a variety of sub-populations (ages,
    races, genders, socioeconomic levels, etc.)3

24
How do I choose whichSocial Indicators to use?
  • To inform policy, a system of indicators should
    include short, medium and long-term indicators.10

25
How do I use Social Indicators?
  • Gather Baselines
  • Compile your Social Indicators and study them.
    As a community, ask yourselves some questions
  • Is where we are acceptable? Is this where we
    want to be?
  • Do we approve of the trend we see?
  • Where will we be five years from now?5

26
How do I use Social Indicators?
  • Tell the Story
  • Look at each indicator. Break it out by age,
    race, gender, socioeconomic status.
  • Gather diverse people knowledgeable about your
    community.
  • Ask them to explain the differences you see
  • Why are the trends heading the way they are?
  • Why are there differences between the
    sub-populations?
  • What are the causes for what the indicators say?
  • The answers to these questions will suggest next
    steps for you to take in policy and programs.5

27
How do I use Social Indicators?
  • Determine your outcomes
  • Through consensus, create outcome statements for
    your community
  • Examples babies will be born healthy children
    will enter school ready to learn young people
    will make smart choices, etc.
  • Decide what indicators you will use to monitor
    each outcome statement.
  • Set improvement goals for each outcome.11

28
How do I use Social Indicators?
  • Identify the Impact
  • Think about the cost of not changing your
    indicators
  • What will the costs be to address the issues when
    the children are older (e.g., remedial education,
    crime, teen mothers, increased welfare costs)?
  • What will the social costs be? Is this what we
    want for our children and our community?
  • Make the economic argument for why you need to
    address the problem indicators now. 5

29
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators can help you to focus your
    efforts as if creating a business plan. They
    tell you
  • where you started from
  • where you are now and
  • where you want to be.
  • They help you monitor your progress along the
    way. 9

30
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators allow us to compare ourselves
    to others (competition). Many indicators can be
    compared with
  • other neighborhoods,
  • like cities or counties,
  • the Commonwealth of Virginia
  • other states, or even
  • other countries.9

31
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators tracked over time can show the
    cost benefit of prevention efforts.
  • Track improvement in outcomes.
  • Track expenditures in prevention during the same
    time.
  • Track declining expenditures in reduced service
    demands.9

32
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators, and the comparison of
    indicators, can force
  • discussion,
  • examination, and
  • commitment to change.9

33
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators can bring together agencies and
    groups to focus on a common goal. An indicator
    becomes
  • a common focus
  • a common language
  • a common outcome. 9

34
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators build confidence and support
    for your efforts.
  • If people understand what you do, they are more
    likely to support you.
  • Social indicators summarize complex efforts into
    understandable outcomes.
  • Social indicators diffuse the politics from
    issues by showing clear, objective data for
    budgetary and policy purposes.9

35
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators build support for funding and
    other resources.
  • Outcomes tracked over time provide evidence that
    investing in prevention is a wise strategy.9

36
Social Indicators as a Business Tool
  • Social Indicators can help to engage the business
    community.
  • Business leaders are comfortable in the world of
    social indicators because they use them daily.
  • Begin to look at your social indicators as assets
    and liabilities.
  • Look at your programming as business
    reinvestment, the cost of advertising or the cost
    of doing business.
  • Market prevention to the business community using
    these concepts.9

37
GOSAP Social Indicators Project
  • For more information contact
  • Susan Gholston
  • Governors Office for Substance Abuse Prevention
  • 804-786-9072
  • Susan.gholston_at_governor.virginia.gov

38
Footnotes
  • 1Land, Kenneth. Social Indicators.
    http//market1.cob.vt.edu/isqols/kenlandessay.htm.
  • 2Moore, Kristin Anderson, Brett V. Brown, with
    Harriet J. Scarupa. The Uses (and Misuses) of
    social Indicators Implications for Public
    Policy. Child Trends Research Brief.
    Publication 2003-01. Washington, D.C.
    www.childtrends.org
  • Moore, Kristin Anderson. Indicators of Child
    and Family Well-Being The good, the Bad and the
    Ugly A Presentation to National Institutes of
    Health, Office of Behavioral and social Sciences
    Research. September 13, 1999. Washington, D.C.
    www.childtrends.org
  • 3Moore, Kristin Anderson. Building a Better
    System of Child and Family Indicators. Child
    Trends Research Brief. Washington, D.C.
    www.childtrends.org
  • Moore, Kristin Anderson. Indicators of Child
    and Family Well-Being The good, the Bad and the
    Ugly A Presentation to National Institutes of
    Health, Office of Behavioral and social Sciences
    Research. September 13, 1999. Washington, D.C.
    www.childtrends.org
  • 4Moore, Kristin Anderson. Indicators of Child
    and Family Well-Being The good, the Bad and the
    Ugly A Presentation to National Institutes of
    Health, Office of Behavioral and social Sciences
    Research. September 13, 1999. Washington, D.C.
    www.childtrends.org
  • 5Friedman, Mark. Results Accountability for Prop
    10 Commissions A Planning Guide for Improving
    the Well-Being of Young Children and Their
    Families. Prepared for The Center for Healthier
    Children, Families and Communities, Los Angeles,
    California. March, 2000.
  • 6Brown, Brett and Thomas Corbett. Social
    Indicators and Public Policy in the Age of
    Devolution. NGA Center for Best Practices.
    http//www.nga.org/center/divisions/1,1188,C_ISSUE
    _BRIEFD_1594,00.html
  • 7Kingsley, G. Thomas. Building and Operating
    Neighborhood Indicator Systems A Guidebook.
    The Urban Institute. March 1999.
    www.urban.org/nnip/index.htm
  • 8Child Trends. Indicators of Childrens
    Well-Being From Construct to Application The
    Third National level Meeting of the Planning
    Phase. April 28, 1997. Publication 1997-18.
    Washington, D.C. www.childtrends.org
  • 9Hogan, Cornelius D. The Importance of
    indicators and What They Can Do. Presentation
    included in the Appendix of Child Trends.
    Indicators of Childrens Well-Being From
    Construct to Application The Third National
    level Meeting of the Planning Phase. April 28,
    1997. Publication 1997-18. Washington, D.C.
    www.childtrends.org
  • 10Brown, Brett and Kris Moore. The Youth
    Indicators Field in Research and Practice
    Current Status and Targets of Opportunity.
    December 2001. Publication 2001-30. Washington,
    D.C. www.childtrends.org
  • 11Murphy, David. Creating Community Capacity to
    Use Indicators. 2001. www.ahs.state.vt.us/publs/
    docs/0106CreatingCommunityCapacity.htm
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