Title: Evaluation Basics for Youth Programs
1Evaluation Basics for Youth Programs
- Ben Silliman, Ph.D.
- Dept. of 4-H Youth Development
2Reasons to LoveProgram Evaluation
- Personal feedback on personal effectiveness
- Practical information for improving delivery
- Professional process and outcomes data to show
accountability, impact
3Understanding Evaluation
- Name the best thing(s) youve seen/experienced in
a youth-at-risk program -
- Name the worst thing(s) youve seen/experienced
in a youth-at-risk program
4Dimensions of Evaluation
- Good things come from
- A clear vision of what is happening
- A positive climate for youth
- Programs that make a difference
- Organizations that run effective programs
-
5Dimensions of Evaluation
- Good things come from research-based
- Environmental scanning
- Program evaluation
- Outcome evaluation
- Organizational/
- professional evaluation
-
6Environmental ScanningWhat do people need?What
resources do people have?
7Needs and Asset Mapping
- Demographic Data
- Community Economic and Social Surveys
- Focus Groups
- Targeted Needs Assessments
- Community Coalition consensus
8Program EvaluationHow good is the program?
9Positive Climates/Best Practices
- Safe Environments
- Structure Appropriate for
- Supportive Relationships
- Social Inclusion
- Standards of Conduct
- Skill Learning Focused
- Contribution-Oriented
- Connections to Family, Community
10Program Climate
- Physical and Psychological Safety
- Safe, healthy facilities
- Conflict resolution
- Wellness habits
11Program Climate
- Appropriate Structure
- Clear consistent boundaries
- Age-based opportunities
- Effective monitoring
12Program Climate
- Supportive Relationships
- Warmth, affirmation
- Communication
- Positive guidance
13Program Climate
- Opportunities to Belong
- Acceptance, inclusion
- Cultural diversity/ tolerance
- Teamwork
14Program Climate
- Positive Social Norms
- High expectations for ethics, behavior
- High achievement orientation
- Service orientation
15Program Climate
- Efficacy and Mattering
- Growth in confidence and autonomy
- Ability to make a difference
- Meaningful changes effected with individuals,
organizations, communities
16Program Climate
- Opportunities for Skill Building
- Mastery of practical skills in many domains
- Ability to relate and navigate
- varied cultures
- Improvements in vocation-
- related skills
17Program Climate
- Integration with Family, School, and Community
- Parent involvement and family activities at home
- Increased academic performance and school
leadership - Youth-adult partnership
18Outcome EvaluationWhats happening with the kids?
19Logic ModelBuilding a Game Plan
- The Big Picture Winning Legacy
- Giant Steps A Habit of Playing Well
- Small Steps Mastering the Fundamentals
- The Right Stuff Good Preparation
- Setting the Table Good Resources
20The Logic of Evaluation
- Inputs
- Investments
- of resources
- Money
- Staff
- Volunteers
- Equipment
- Supplies
- Effects of
- constraints
- Laws
- Regulations
- Funder requirements
- Outcomes
- Short-term outcomes
- Knowledge
- Attitude
- Skills
- Aspirations
- Long-term outcomes (impacts)
- Behavioral change
- Social-economic change
- Cultural change
- Outputs
- Products of programs
- Classes taught
- Materials distributed
- Hours of service
- Participants served
21Evaluating Outcomesin Small Steps
- Knowledge
- Attitudes
- Skills
- Aspirations
22Outcome Domains
- Physical
- Health
- Safety
- Wellness
- Risk Reduction
23Outcome Domains
- Intellectual/Cognitive
- Critical thinking/
- problem solving
- Academic achievement
- Project skills/mastery
- Decision-making
- Creative thinking
24Outcome Domains
- Emotional
- Coping
- Stress management
- Optimism
- Self-efficacy
- Character
25Organizational/ProfessionalEvaluationHow (well)
do leaders make things happen?
26Organizational Processes
- Serving People
- Designing and Producing Better Goods and Services
- Building an Efficient and Effective Workforce
27Six Sigma Processes
- Define the project goals and customer (internal
and external) requirements - Measure and determine customer needs and
specifications benchmark competitors and
industry - Analyze the process options to meet the customer
needs - Design (detailed) the process
- to meet the customer needs
- Verify the design performance
- and ability to meet customer needs
28Professional Evaluation
- Professional Standards
- Novice-to-Expert Rubrics and Certification for
General Specialized Competencies - Individual and Team goals, performance standards,
and professional development - Continuous quality improvement
29Human Subjects
- Satisfaction, description is
- program feedback
- Individual performance change is consent-required
feedback
30Replicating and SustainingPrograms
- Stage 1 Program running as planned, having
intended effect (Process Evaluation/Formative
Evaluation/Quality Control) -
- Stage 2 Change in knowledge, attitude, skill, or
aspiration (Outcome Evaluation/Summative
Evaluation/Achievements Impact)