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1 Module 8 Reporting Results
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2 Learning Objectives At the end of this session participants will: Understand key points to effectively present results Hands-on Experience in Developing a Program Evaluation Plan Hands-on Experience in Presenting a Program Evaluation Plan
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3 Presenting Results Communication Basics Writing Reports for the Public Executive Summary Charts and Tables Oral Presentations
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4 Communication Basics Goal is to communicate, not to impress Consider your presentation from your audience’s point of view Communicate with your audience in mind
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5 Discussion Think of the best report that your have read. What made it the best?
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6 Writing Reports Simple and clear Place technical information in an appendix State limitations of study Report findings: simple, easy to follow Organize around research questions or themes Place major points up front Never make recommendations without support Report
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7 Writing Reports Present the most important material Leave time to revise, revise, revise Have a cold reader review the draft Have a knowledgeable reader review the draft. Report
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8 Executive Summary Essential for busy readers Short: 1-4 pages Bottom line focused: major findings and recommendations Present in bullet format Refer them to report or appendix for more detail
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9 Executive Summary Format Brief overview: background and purpose of the study the “hook” Brief Description of major questions, issues Brief Description of research methods Major Findings Major Conclusions Major Recommendations
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10 The Report Introduction purpose, background Methodology brief in body of report details can go in appendix Findings Present data so audience can understand Present data selectively: what’s your point?
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11 The Report Conclusions Tie back to your research questions Recommendations, if any. Make sure you have presented the evidence to support the recommendations.
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12 Charts and Tables Impact Audience acceptance Memory retention Shows the big picture, message Visually interesting
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13 Charts and Tables One picture is worth a thousand words.
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14 Charts and Tables should: Present data simply and accurately Make data coherent Engage the audience Purpose: to describe explore tabulate compare
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15 Charts and Tables Tables: Better for presenting data Charts: Better for presenting the message.
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16 Chart Options Line:trends over time
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17 Pie Chart: parts of a whole Chart Options
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18 Chart Options Bar chart: percent distribution
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19 Chart Options Cluster bar chart: comparing several items
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20 Chart Options Combination
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21 Effective Charts Easy to read use upper and lower cases (not all caps) only use a few type faces appropriate for the delivery Avoid busy patterns Use white space Keep the chart simple
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22 Effective Charts Keep scales honest Use title to convey message Provide sufficient data with the chart so the message is there. Identify source of data Put supporting data in an appendix
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23 Effective Tables Simple and accurate Clearly label rows and columns no abbreviations Show percents round to nearest whole numbers Show total numbers Identify the source of the data
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24 Discussion Think of the best presentation you have ever heard. What was that presentation about? What made it the best?
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25 Oral Presentations Prepare: Who is your audience? What do you want them to remember? How much time will you have? What’s the delivery resources available? What few handouts, if any? Rehearse, get feedback
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26 Oral Presentations Simple, clear, and audience focused Avoid complex language, detailed data Organize: Tell them what you will tell them Tell them Tell them what you told them If possible, keep interactive Be prepared for questions
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27 Group Presentations This is not a competition Each group will make their unique presentation Do not compare your presentation to others This is a learning experience Each group will have 15 minutes Someone at your site keep track and give you a 3 minute and 1 minute warning
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28 Course Evaluations Written Evaluations Discussion: Most useful or important learning? What can you actually use? Thank You!
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