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Evaluation research Using research methods in combinations Policy analysis
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Evaluation Examining the effects of programs, policies and laws Programs: providing services to clients Policies: rules for handling clients, actions taken i.e., policy on deadly force for fleeing felons Laws: what are the real impacts
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Evaluation People assumed that particular effects would take place However, those effects may or may not happen There may be unanticipated side effects to a change, both good and bad
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Policy Usually some issue is raised Demands are made, and there is support and opposition Goals should be formulated and ways established to attain those goals (objectives) Policy output: the program, resources allocated
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Policy Then the impact is determined Did the changes in policy outputs have an impact on the problem? Hypothesis: If some policy action is taken, then we expect a particular result To test the hypothesis, must do an evaluation
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Evaluation components Process evaluation and impact Process Needs assessment and monitoring part of the process evaluation The first step should be needs assessment Frequently this is not done
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Needs assessment Is the program/policy/intervention needed? Is the problem serious? Will it “get better” on its own? Who are the members of the target population? (those most in need of services, deterrents, etc.) What are their characteristics?
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Needs assessment Programs will have little impact if they don’t affect the target population Programs will have little effect if they do not take into account the characteristics of the target population
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Needs assessment i.e., a school based program will not help chronically truant delinquents Adding 11 th and 12 th grade classes at a reform school will not be useful if very few delinquents at the school are functioning at even a 9 th grade level Welfare to work requires child care
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Needs assessment There is a need to gather information to determine the characteristics of the target population May not be readily apparent, as the target population might not be in the system Assessment methods: records, key informants, gatekeepers, data collection
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Needs If the target population is not reached, even good programs, policies and laws may not have an impact Weed and Seed example Adolescent drug offender example
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Needs Establishment of goals and objectives Exercise: what are the goals of a prison Mechanisms (objectives, activities) for meeting those goals Develop a list
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In an evaluation The research must ask What does the program intend to accomplish? How do existing staff determine whether they have attained their goals? Have formal goals and objectives been identified and prioritized?
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Evaluation What performance measures are currently used? Are they adequate, or must additional measures be developed as part of the evaluation? It would be very useful if evaluators were included at the start of a program to establish measures, seldom happens
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Monitoring (process) What is actually happening in the intervention? What happens on paper, theoretically, may be different from what actually happens Who is actually served by the program? Are they members of the target population?
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Monitoring If they are not, the program will probably have little impact how are people selected for inclusion, or how do they decide to participate? How do participants differ from members of the target population? How do potential participants differ from nonparticipants?
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Monitoring How do staff feel about the program or policy? Example: laws and prosecutors Juvenile judges and juvenile justice programs Is the program or policy actually being implemented?
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Monitoring Are all the components being addressed? Example of drug courts Program components and benchmarks, means of assessing whether program components are being met
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Monitoring Are there problems that were not anticipated? i.e., lack of community support, resistance to the program or policy, reactions of criminal justice personnel, unexpected obstacles
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Monitoring Unanticipated side effects Could be positive or negative Positive: conditions improve for people not in the target population Mental health centers, nutrition requirements for WIC Negative: example of net widening Program may do something else
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