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Evaluation Essentials: Methods For Conducting Sound Research

ISBN: 978-0-787-98439-7

June 2008

Jossey-Bass

192 pages

Description

Evaluation Essentials

Evaluation Essentials is an indispensable text that offers an introduction to program evaluation. Examples of program descriptions from a variety of sectors including public policy, public health, non-profit management, social work, arts management, education, international assistance, and labor illustrate the book's step-by-step approach to the process and methods of program evaluation. Perfect for students as well as new evaluators, Evaluation Essentials offers a comprehensive foundation in the core concepts, theories, and methods of program evaluation.

Beth Osborne Daponte—a leading authority in program evaluation—clearly shows how to form evaluation questions, describe programs using program theory and program logic models, understand causation as it relates to evaluation, use quasi-experimental design, and create meaningful outcome measures. The book offers appropriate approaches to collecting data and introduces readers to survey design and sampling. Daponte explores what it means to say that a program "causes" change to occur. Evaluation Essentials provides a rigorous introduction to quasi-experimental design, helps determine which designs are most appropriate for given situations, and explains the trade-offs between designs.

About the Author

Beth Osborne Daponte, Ph.D., is a senior research scholar at the Institution for Social and Policy Studies and lecturer in the School of Management at Yale University. Currently, she is also working with a large community foundation, helping it address its evaluation challenges at both the organizational and programmatic levels.

Features
* General introduction to program evaluation, especially in international relations, policy, and social work

* Classroom ready with learning objectives, summaries, discussion questions, etc.

* Author famous for suing Dick Cheney. She worked for the commerce department and released a report on projected war dead for the Iraq war. Her estimates were 4-5 times higher than the official government number, and she was correct. Cheney had her fired. She sued and won.