Friday, November 26, 2010

20101127 - The Planning-Evaluation Cycle (SocialResearchMethods.net)


Often, evaluation is construed as part of a larger managerial or administrative process. Sometimes this is referred to as the planning-evaluation cycle. The distinctions between planning and evaluation are not always clear; this cycle is described in many different ways with various phases claimed by both planners and evaluators.
Usually, the first stage of such a cycle -- the planning phase -- is designed to elaborate a set of potential actions, programs, or technologies, and select the best for implementation.

Depending on the organization and the problem being addressed, a planning process could involve any or all of these stages:
the
formulation
of the problem, issue, or concern;
the broad
conceptualization
of the major alternatives that might be considered;
the
detailing
of these alternatives and their potential implications;
the
evaluation
of the alternatives and the selection of the best one; and
the
implementation of the selected alternative.


Although these stages are traditionally considered planning, there is a lot of evaluation work involved. Evaluators are trained in needs assessment, they use methodologies -- like the concept mapping one presented later -- that help in conceptualization and detailing, and they have the skills to help assess alternatives and make a choice of the best one.

The evaluation phase also involves a sequence of stages that typically includes:
the
formulation
of the major objectives, goals, and hypotheses of the program or technology;
the
conceptualization
and operationalization of the major components of the evaluation -- the program, participants, setting, and measures;
the
design
of the evaluation,
detailing
how these components will be coordinated;
the
analysis
of the information, both qualitative and quantitative; and
the
utilization of the evaluation results.


Source: http://www.socialresearchmethods.net/kb/pecycle.php

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