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Communicating your findings to ‘hard to reach’ public audiences

Communicating your findings to ‘hard to reach’ public audiences Lessons from medical research translation and social marketing Johanna Bell, Menzies School of Health Research. Alkin & Christie’s Evaluation Theory Tree, 2004. Snapshot.

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Communicating your findings to ‘hard to reach’ public audiences

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  1. Communicating your findings to ‘hard to reach’ public audiences Lessons from medical research translation and social marketing Johanna Bell, Menzies School of Health Research

  2. Alkin & Christie’s Evaluation Theory Tree, 2004

  3. Snapshot Potential benefits of translating findings for audiences beyond policy/program managers Using a medical research translation model to frame evaluation translation Using multimedia social marketing products to support the transfer of findings to ‘hard to reach’ audiences Looking at who should be responsible for evaluation transfer?

  4. Thinking about evaluation use System level focus, developing processes for system level change 3rd generation Knowledge Integration Knowledge Exchange / Translation Focus on individual policies, programs, organisations 2nd generation Knowledge Transfer Communication, dissemination, focus on packaging results 1st generation

  5. Maximising influence Maximising influence => maximising change Maximising change => increasing awareness & understanding of evaluation findings beyond policy makers & program managers to multiple audiences

  6. Familiar territory • Evaluators are well versed in communicating findings to policy makers and program managers • Much effort goes into presenting findings in a format which meets the expectations of the primary audience (often the evaluation commissioner) • So it should! They are the primary audience…but… • …we risk overlooking opportunities to translate findings to additional audiences

  7. Written evaluation reports The written evaluation report is king! But its domination is a blessing and a curse

  8. Written evaluation reports

  9. Data collection Analysis & reporting Client deliverables Knowledge flow Dissemination Stakeholder interviews Presentations? Meetings? Client focus groups ? Written evaluation report Commissioner receives report Literature review Client & stakeholder survey Workshops? Practitioner observation Online report?

  10. Potential benefits • Increased influence and assurance • A more ethical approach • Greater opportunities to utilise evaluators’ established relationships • New area of specialisation for evaluators

  11. More audiences = more chance of utilisation Diminished risk of having evaluation findings ‘shelved.’ Accountability in numbers Helps protect evaluation from shifting political backdrops Increased influence & security

  12. A more ethical response • Improve the reputation of evaluation industry • Restore trust in evaluators • Help combat ‘evaluation fatigue’ in over-researched populations • Empower participants through the provision of information

  13. Utilisation of relationships • Evaluators establish relationships with a range of stakeholders during an evaluation • These relationships provide potential springboards for feedback/dissemination • They make evaluators particularly well-placed for involvement in feedback • Relationships can’t be ‘handed over’ to a client

  14. New area of specialisation • Evaluators are well placed to increase their involvement in feedback/findings translation • Potential for new area of specialisation / business development for evaluators

  15. Research Translation Model Impact Metrics Govern-ment Research Findings from Mobile Preschool Evaluation Policy Educators Practice Public Behaviour Academia Advancement Industry Application Adapted from the UK-SBRP Research Translation Model

  16. Research Translation Model MPP Research Transfer Activities Impact Metrics Dept. Education & Training Final evaluation report Round table discussions Collaboration on future trials Policy Principals, Teachers, Educators Regional workshops with principals, teachers & ECS Face-to-face feedback with assistant teachers supported by purpose-built flipchart Practice Participants, carers, community Flipchart for assistant teachers to use with parents Posters for school / store / Clinic Meetings with parents in communities Behaviour Education & Health academics Articles in education and health journals Conference Presentations Advancement

  17. Grog and the Brain

  18. Take home messages • Well planned, well-resourced research transfer strategies are important • Reaching multiple audiences and increasing evaluator involvement in transfer has potential benefits • Medical research transfer models provide ready-made frameworks for evaluation transfer • Evaluators could work more closely with multi-media specialists to develop innovative products for supporting transfer

  19. Acknowledgements • Menzies School of Health Research • Mobile Preschool Evaluation team, especially GeorgieNutton & Julie Fraser • Healing and Resilience team, especially ShereeCairney • Remote community members, NT Department of Education, NT Department of Health, AMSs • NHMRC, AER

  20. Significantinroads Significant inroads have been made in the area of evaluation use/knowledge translation Evaluation theorists such as Patton, Cousins, Fetterman & King have challenged us to conceptualise the translation of evaluation findings as an iterative process rather than a product

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