1 / 12

Tracking & Evaluation Behavior Change

Tracking & Evaluation Behavior Change. Laurie Gustafson Community POWER Grantee Orientation October 4, 2011. What do we mean by behavior change?. Help your audience make meaningful and long-lasting behavior changes.

chavez
Télécharger la présentation

Tracking & Evaluation Behavior Change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tracking & Evaluation Behavior Change Laurie Gustafson Community POWER Grantee Orientation October 4, 2011

  2. What do we mean by behavior change? • Help your audience make meaningful and long-lasting behavior changes. • Community-based social marketing (CBSM) has been shown to be very effective at bringing about behavior change. • Community POWER survey questions based on CBSM theory—turning awareness into action.

  3. Why it’s Important to Track Behavior Change See the impact of your work and assess which programming is most successful. Allows SWMCB to see the impact of your work and encourages sustainability of the program. Gives you a tool for showing impact to others. Funders and programming partners often look for evidence that your initiatives are having the desired outcome.

  4. Community POWER Final Report Final Reports: Due October 15, 2011 Describe how the surveys were administered Report the number of surveys sent/administered Report the number of surveys returned Detail the responses you received using actual numbers, not percentages Report how many total individuals responded that they had positively changed at least one behavior due to the project? (e.g. marked a ‘yes’) Share written comments

  5. Survey Questions:About the Questions • Survey contains 19 questions • Questions cover Reuse, Toxicity Reduction, Recycling, Reducing and Composting • Two part questions: • Behavior • Changed because of involvement in program

  6. Survey Questions:Choosing the Right Questions to Ask Only those questions that relate to the content of what people learned through your Community POWER project should be used. If some of the questions do not relate to your project, remove those from your survey or questionnaire. Choose 4-8 questions for up to a one page survey. Do not use more than 10 questions.

  7. Survey Questions:When to Administer the Questions Pre-tests are optional Post-tests are required Administer surveys 2-6 months after a person participates in your program or educational experience

  8. Survey Questions:Customizing the Questions & Survey The wording of the questions should not be altered. Logos and the name of your program, project, or workshop can be inserted throughout the survey. You may insert Community POWER questions into an existing survey or pair them with other questions you design. We do not recommend asking more than 10 total questions in one survey. Ask the respondent’s level of experience with the program (days or hours of participation, for example) as well as other background information.

  9. Survey Questions:How to Administer the Questions Written surveys On-line surveys Interview format (over the phone or in-person)

  10. Tips List your results with actual numbers; NOT percentages. Track all brochures ordered and distributed. Count attendance at workshops and events. Offer incentives for people to make a behavior change and to return surveys. Track circulation (e-newsletters, newspaper articles, newsletter articles, and other related outreach tools). Offer pledges to motivate behavior change.

  11. Resources • The Psychology of Sustainable Behavior: Tips for empowering people to take environmentally positive actionhttp://www.pca.state.mn.us/oea/publications/p-ee1-01.pdf

  12. Questions?

More Related