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Assessing and Evaluating Impact Abigail J. Stewart and Janet E.Malley University of Michigan
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What are we trying to assess? Impact of project Takes place over five years Addresses different aspects of the problem Recruitment Retention Climate Leadership Includes interventions at the University level College level Departmental level Individual level
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What data will we need? Will need to address Change over time Different elements of the problem Recruitment Retention Climate Leadership Different levels of intervention
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Model of data needed Pre-post data Identify change across five years (curve) Identify level at “pre” and then “post” Addressing particular problem Recruitment (how many women scientists) University College (large vs. small) Department (is this meaningful? Problem of aggregation, variable resources) Individual (really not meaningful)
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Thinking about the model Are numbers/outcomes the goal? What about practices and policies that produce the numbers? What about sustainability?
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Revising the model Identify what changes (recruited women) Identify what can produce change Changed practices Changed policies Identify what can sustain change Institutionalization of the practices Institutionalization of the policies
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Engage in this process for all elements Retention Outcomes More women stay; fewer leave More women succeed Processes that produce change in the outcomes May be different processes that produce staying vs. succeeding Policies that sustain change in the outcomes Processes that promote staying (partner policies? Family friendly policies?) Processes that promote succeeding (flexible clock, fairer reviews, less invisibility and marginalization)
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Engage in this process for all elements Climate Outcomes (changes in reported climate) Processes that produce change in the outcomes (more difficult to pinpoint; may need to collect data on “best practices” in high morale places) Policies that sustain change in the outcomes (once have best practices, easier to identify policies)
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Engage in this process for all elements Leadership Outcomes More women chairs More women in other kinds of leadership positions Fewer women who feel marginalized Processes that produce change in the outcomes Selection processes Overall impact on climate for women’s voices Policies that sustain change in the outcomes Accountability (not same as selection) New procedures institutionalized
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What timeline do we need for assessing change? Five year program: Can anything change in five years? At what level? What indicators? recruitment? Yes attrition? Unlikely Climate? Pre-post? Annual change? (Growth curve?) Significant change from baseline to outcome? Some interventions/key transformation points within program Appointment of woman chair Introduction of crucial policy Attainment of critical mass First successful tenure case
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How can we use data collection as part of the change process? Obvious with climate surveys Target points of intervention Mentoring Chairs Service burden Contract renegotiation (counter-offers) Self-studies in departments Graduate student attrition Competitive climate in department
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How can we use data analysis as part of the change process? Obvious with salary analyses Identify inequities Intervene Institutionalize analysis and intervention
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How can we use data analysis as part of the change process? Obvious with space analyses Identify inequities in square footage Intervene Institutionalize analysis and intervention Identify process of assigning space based on fair criteria Need Funding Real issue may be inequities in quality of space not square footage
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How can we use data reporting as part of the change process? NSF data on women and named chairs Identifies a problem (too few women get them; discover too few nominated) Requires a nomination mechanism for solution Propose alternative nomination strategies
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How can we use data reporting as part of the change process? NSF data on women and key committees Identifies a problem (too few women on them) Requires a mechanism for solution (selection, election, etc.) Propose alternative selection or election strategies
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Making absence of data visible can help promote changes No exit interviews Poor data on attrition/retention Need better data Need better process
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Must use data to support the change process Institutional change is most persuasively based on data Collecting, analyzing and reporting the data costly in time and resources Evidence of change provides crucial support for hope, faith in the change process
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