1 / 14

Participatory Evaluation (PE)

Presentation by: Kimberly Baker January 30, 2008. Participatory Evaluation (PE). “Involving Children and Young People in Research on Domestic Violence and Housing” by Helen Baker. What is PE?.

noel
Télécharger la présentation

Participatory Evaluation (PE)

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. Presentation by: Kimberly Baker January 30, 2008 Participatory Evaluation (PE) “Involving Children and Young People in Research on Domestic Violence and Housing” by Helen Baker

  2. What is PE? • A learning process for the program recipients that will help them in their effort to reach desired goals (Greenwood & Levin, 1998) • Process of self-assessment, collective knowledge production, and cooperative action (Jackson & Kassam, 1998) • Process controlled by the people in the program. It is a formal, reflective process for their own development and empowerment (Patton, 1990).

  3. Goal/Purpose of PE • Goal: • Improve program/organization or solve problems, not to seek definitive statements about outcomes (formative evaluation) • Purpose: • Practical • Useful • Formative • Empowering

  4. Who is involved in PE? • Participants: • Evaluator is a teacher, collaborator, and participant (not an expert) • Key Stakeholders for the program or organization • People who can make decisions or implement programming • Intricately involved in the entire process • Control of the evaluation is jointly shared by evaluator and stakeholders

  5. PE seeks to be: • Practical • Useful • Formative • Empowering

  6. PE Advantages • Results are useful • Gives ownership to individuals carrying out recommendations • Flexibility and tailor-made • Real, needed change within organization • Increased communication, program understanding, stronger partnerships, etc

  7. PE Disadvantages • Time-consuming • Clients and participants may need special assistance to participate fully • Rewards and consequences must be clearly spelled out to promote full participation • Usually not generalizable

  8. Case Study Description • Baker, H. (2005). Involving children and young people in research on domestic violence and housing. Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, 27(3-4), 281-297. • University of Liverpool and Save the Children UK • Aim of study was to involve children research in a participatory manner: • to investigate service provision (housing) available for children experiencing domestic violence • to make concrete recommendations for change • to highlight good practices

  9. Case Study Approach • 3 geographical areas to get sufficient number of children participants • 19 children ages 5-16 years • 5 parents • 39 service providers • 3 stages • Detailed review of policy and legal frameworks • Questionnaire to 300 service providers nationwide • Direct consultation of children and service providers

  10. How PE is Used • Wide range of methods due to different skills of children because of age: Semi-structured interviews Focus groups Vignettes Drawings • Children fully participated in the research findings: • They were informed of outcomes of their report • One teenager helped write the final report and was instrumental in working with the research team to identify main issues for children • One teen talked with the media about the project findings

  11. Findings: Homelessness • Despite policies to protect children in their own homes, many must leave so that the abuser cannot locate them • many escapes lead to homelessness • feelings of trauma, confusion, insecurity, anger • Policy is to give priority accommodations to people who are unintentionally homeless • Lack of available housing stock • Many children have to move to urban areas that are quite scary and unfamiliar

  12. Findings: Appropriate Housing • Different opinions in policy – must provide “appropriate” accommodations • Children: safe physical environment, can play, near public transportation to get to school and see friends • Housing shortage in rural areas: cramped hotel rooms, no room to play, share washing and cooking area with strangers, and lack of security • Policy changed so that when a child is involved then a hotel cannot be used

  13. Findings: Refuges • Refuges provide many services for children: • Play activities Counseling sessions • Day trips Safety • Children all agree that refuges were instrumental and valuable – BUT there’s a shortage of refuge accommodations due to funding • New standards for refuges regarding staff ratios and enough space for children’s activities • Despite new policies and standards, the participating children reveal that there are still problems.

  14. Case Study Opinions • The research is compromised somewhat due to: • Constraints of time • Access to children who agreed or whose parents agreed to participate (biases) • May only reflect views of children who seek help • Doesn’t quite fit PE – the children were interviewed and helped write up report but they didn’t get to help define issues, write new policies or implement the new standards

More Related