Collaborative Approaches to Evaluation. Группа авторов

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Collaborative Approaches to Evaluation - Группа авторов Evaluation in Practice Series

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participatory evaluation. New directions in evaluation, no. 80. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

       Whitmore, E. (1998b). “We need to rebuild this house.” The role of empowerment evaluation of a Mexican farmers’ cooperative. In E. T. Jackson & Y. Kassam (Eds.), Knowledge shared: Participatory evaluation in development cooperation (pp. 217–230). West Hartford, CT: Kumarian Press.

       Whitmore, E. (2001). Emancipatory qualitative research. In I. Shaw & N. Gould (Eds.), Qualitative research in social work (pp. 83–99). London, UK: Sage.

       Whitmore, E. (2014). Researcher/evaluator roles and social justice. In S. Brisolara, D. Seigart, & S. SenGupta (Eds.), Feminist evaluation and research: Theory and practice (pp. 59–94). New York, NY: Guilford.

       Whitmore, E., & Wilson, M. G. (2005). Popular resistance to global corporate rule: The role of social with (with a little help from Gramsci and Freire). In I. Ferguson, M. Lavalette, & E. Whitmore (Eds.), Globalisation, global justice and social work (pp. 189–206). London, UK: Routledge.

       Whitmore, E., & McKee, C. (2001). Six street youth who could… In P. Reason & H. Bradbury (Eds.), Handbook of action research: Participative inquiry and practice (pp. 396–402). London, UK: Sage.

      About the Authors

      J. Bradley Cousins, Ph.D. is Professor Emeritus and Senior Researcher, Centre for Research on Educational and Community Services, University of Ottawa. His interests include collaborative approaches to evaluation, evaluation use, and evaluation capacity building. Contact: [email protected]

      Lyn M. Shulha, Ph.D. is Professor Emerita, Faculty of Education, Queen’s University. Her interests include evaluation use, collaborative approaches to evaluation, and student assessment.

      Elizabeth Whitmore, Ph.D. is Professor Emerita, School of Social Work, Carleton University. Her interests include collaborative approaches to evaluation, gender issues in evaluation, and social justice.

      Hind Al Hudib, Ph.D. is an independent consultant in Ottawa and recent Ph.D. graduate, Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa. Her interests include evaluation policy and organizational capacity for evaluation and collaborative approaches to evaluation.

      Nathalie Gilbert, Ph.D. is a Director at the Champlain Local Health Integration Network and Ph.D. graduate, Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa. Her interests include collaborative approaches to evaluation, evaluation in health systems, and patient engagement.

      Appendix 1: COVE Promotional Activities for the CAE Principles

      2014, October: Single paper session, American Evaluation Association, Denver, USA

      2015, January: Half-day workshop, Swiss Evaluation Society, Geneva, Switzerland

      2015, February: Half-day workshop, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

      2015, March: Half-day workshop, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain

      2015, May: Expert lecture, Canadian Evaluation Society, Montréal, Canada

      2015, December: Video: CRECS Ten Minute Window, 3(4). www.crecs.uottawa.ca/publications/ten-minute-window/evidence-based-principles

      2016, September: Two-hour seminar, Israeli Professional Evaluation Association, Jerusalem, Israel

      2016, October: Two-hour seminar, International Congress on Palliative Care, Montréal, Canada

      2016, October: Full-day workshop, European Evaluation Society, Maastricht, The Netherlands

      2016, November: Full-day workshop, American Evaluation Society, Atlanta, USA

      2017, February: Virtual coffee break session, American Evaluation Association, hosted from Clearwater FL, USA

      2017, May: Keynote Address, L’avaluacio participative, Conference on Youth Empowerment, Barcelona, Spain

      2017, June: Full-day workshop, Canadian Evaluation Society, Vancouver, Canada

      2017, October: Two-hour seminar, Fed Gov, Buenos Aires, Argentina

      2017, October: Half-day workshop, Universidad National de Jan Juan, San Juan, Argentina

      2017, October: Half-day workshop, Universidad Federal de Espirito Santos, Vittoria, Brazil

      2017, November: Full-day workshop, American Evaluation Association, Washington, D.C., USA

      2017, December: Half-day workshop, Turkish Monitoring and Evaluation Society, Ankara, Turkey

      2017, December: Half-day workshop, Jordanian Development Evaluation Association (EvalJordan), Amman, Jordan

      Appendix 2: Launch of CAE Principles (E-mail/Listserv Text)

      Greetings. On behalf of the COVE research team (Collaborative Opportunities to Value Evaluation: Brad Cousins, Lyn Shula, Elizabeth Whitmore, Hind Al Hudib, Nathalie Gilbert) it is my very great pleasure to introduce Principles to Guide Collaborative Approaches to Evaluation (CAE). We would like to take this opportunity to promote their application and use.

      The eight evidence-based Principles were developed on the basis of data from 320 practising evaluators in North America and beyond and were recently published in the American Journal of Evaluation (Shulha at al., 2016, vol. 37, no. 2).

      Please find attached for your convenience and use two resource documents:

      1 A brochure-style document that describes the Principles and potential applications in i) guiding CAE practice, ii) reflecting on the implementation and consequences of recent CAE projects, iii) evaluation policy review, iv) structuring professional development, and v) framing research on CAE practice (as well as other possible applications).

      2 An indicator document that provides items for consideration with respect to the application of each of the eight CAE principles.

      The eight Principles are to be: used as a set, although individual principles may be differentially weighted depending on context; considered to be interdependent and overlapping; and recognized as being nonlinear, albeit with some adherence to a loose temporal order.

      For further information about the principles please follow this link to a short video presentation: http://crecs.uottawa.ca/publications/ten-minute-window/evidence-based-principles

      We sincerely hope that the use and application of the principles will benefit in significant ways your practice in collaborative and participatory approaches to evaluation. At this juncture, despite our systematic efforts to validate the Principles, we recognize the current version to be preliminary and subject to ongoing development and refinement. To that end …

      You are invited!

      The principles were developed on the basis of thoughtful input by practising evaluators such as you. We invite you to seriously consider an opportunity to contribute to their ongoing development through empirical inquiry. We plan to publish

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