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Participatory Evaluation

Participatory Evaluation. What is participatory evaluation?.

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Participatory Evaluation

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  1. Participatory Evaluation

  2. What is participatory evaluation? Participatory evaluation is an evaluation that involves all the stakeholders in a project—those directly affected by it or carrying it out—in every phase of evaluating it, and in applying the results of that evaluation to the improvement of the work.

  3. Why would (and wouldn’t) you use participatory evaluation?

  4. Advantages • If gives you a better perspective on both the initial needs of the project’s beneficiaries, and on it’s ultimate effects. • It can get you information you wouldn’t get otherwise. • It tells you what worked and what didn’t from the perspective of those most directly involved—beneficiaries and staff. • It can tell you why something does or doesn’t work. • It results in a more effective project. • It empowers stakeholders. • It can provide a voice for those who are not often heard.

  5. Advantages (cont.) • It teaches skills that can be used in employment and other areas of life. • It bolsters self-confidence and self-esteem in those who may have little of either. • It demonstrates to people ways in which they can take more control of their lives. • It encourages stakeholder ownership of the project. • It can spark creativity in everyone involved. • It encourages working collaboratively. • It fits into a larger participatory effort.

  6. Disadvantages • It takes more time than conventional process • It takes the establishment of trust among all participants in the process. • You have to make sure everyone’s involved, not just “leaders” of various groups. • You have to train people to understand evaluation and how the participatory process works, as well as teaching them basic research skills.

  7. Disadvantages (cont.) • You have to get buy-in and commitment from participants. • People’s lives—illness, child care and relationship problems, bringing the crops in, etc.—may cause delays or get in the way of the evaluation. • You may have to be creative about how you get, record, and report information. • Funders and policy makers may not understand or believe in participatory evaluation.

  8. When would you use participatory evaluation? • When you’re already committed to a participatory process for your project. • When you have time, or when results are more important than time. • When you can convince funders that it’s a good idea. • When there may be issues in the community or population that outside evaluators or program providers aren’t likely to be aware of.

  9. Who should be involved? All stakeholders including: • Participants or beneficiaries. • Project line staff and or volunteers. • Administrators. • Outside evaluators, if they’re involved. • Community officials. • Others whose lives are affected by the project.

  10. How do you conduct a participatory evaluation? • Recruit stakeholders as participatory evaluators. • Train evaluators. • Name and frame the issue. • Develop a theory of practice and address it. • Determine the evaluation questions. • Collect information. • Use your analysis to celebrate what worked and adjust the rest to improve the project. • Stick with it indefinitely.

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