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From Data to Action Milbrey McLaughlin Stanford University RP Conference April 10 2014

From Data to Action Milbrey McLaughlin Stanford University RP Conference April 10 2014. What’s the Problem?. Youth-serving agencies are disconnected, isolated—”siloed” Youth policies and programs lack coherence, consistency & comprehensiveness at the system or community level

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From Data to Action Milbrey McLaughlin Stanford University RP Conference April 10 2014

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  1. From Data to Action Milbrey McLaughlin Stanford University RP Conference April 10 2014

  2. What’s the Problem? • Youth-serving agencies are disconnected, isolated—”siloed” • Youth policies and programs lack coherence, consistency & comprehensiveness at the system or community level • Cross-institutional collaboration is tough to motivate and sustain

  3. Youth Data Archive • Operates as a university-community partnership • Links cross-agency, longitudinal administrative data at the individual level • Adopts a youth sector perspective: Maps local supports and resources for youth • Affords a community-level view of youth needs, resources, short falls, opportunities for collaboration • Provides the connection and ‘glue’ for joint action

  4. YDA’s Guiding Principles • User-focused approach to developing questions, interpreting and presenting findings • JGC acts as third party neutral • Partners retain data ownership: MOUs spell out conditions for publication & use • Focus on actionable questions • An iterative ‘design/build/revise’ approach; a long term commitment to community partners

  5. Benefits to Community Partners • Cross-institutional, system-level view of policies and programs for youth—wins, warts and all. • Increased coherence/efficiencies of youth policies & resources • Expanded/improved capacity for data collection & facility with data • New cross-sector relationships, resources and partnerships– opportunities for collective impact

  6. Benefits to University Partners • Informs theory development- practice-based, inquiry-based; iterative, on-going • A broader lens on youth-related research issues– a youth sector frame • Better understanding of the community perspective– how to collaborate, communicate, support, frame actionable questions • Meaningful, sustained community partnerships

  7. Challenges to Launching & Sustaining a YDA: Community View • Technical—incomplete, inaccurate, missing data; little capacity • Organizational– Leaders’ buy-in and advocacy; middle management buy-in; churn; regulatory hurdles • Political—trusting university-based researchers; trusting each other; worries about data use; worries about cross-agency collaboration

  8. Why is Collaboration so Difficult? • Competition for scarce resources • Different models/outcomes/language/priorities • Incompatible policy frames/accountability demands • Different financial resources, personnel & time constraints • Negative institutional or personal histories • Lack of will or motivation

  9. Challenges: University Partners • Academic norms often incompatible with core YDA principles– data ownership & review; theory development goals; extending existing empirical work • Social science norms sometimes conflict with effective YDA operation—notions of validity, reliability, generalizability • Time, tenure & funding

  10. Lessons Learned • Context matters: A YDA cannot be wholesaled—effectiveness requires situated, pragmatic construction • Animated by a shared community sense of urgency about a youth problem • Process is product; cross-agency collaboration a fundamental shift– patience, time and opportunity required to build trust, credibility, comfort • Learning is a product of a locally adaptive process; few hard & fast “findings”—changeable, changing • Collective capacity builders needed to be responsible for cross-agency learning and action

  11. Thank you! Questions? From Data to Action. McLaughlin & London, Eds. Harvard Education Press 2013 www.gardnercenter.stanford.edu

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