1. An Introduction to Collaborative, Participatory, and
Empowerment Evaluation Approaches, David Fetterman, Liliana
Rodríguez-Campos, Abraham Wandersman, Rita Goldfarb O’Sullivan, &
Ann Zukoski
2. Essentials of Collaborative Evaluation, Liliana
Rodríguez-Campos
3. A Collaborative Evaluation of an Aquarium (Marine Life Program),
Liliana Rodríguez-Campos, Rigoberto Rincones-Gómez, & Rosalyn
Roker
4. A Collaborative Evaluation of a Multisite, Multipurpose,
Multiyear Early Childhood Quality Care Initiative, Rita Goldfarb
O’Sullivan
5. Essentials of Participatory Evaluation, Ann Zukoski & Cate
Bosserman
6. A Participatory Evaluation of a Community Health Improvement
Initiative, Ann Zukoski, Cate Bosserman, & Courtney Baechler
7. A Participatory Evaluation of a Community Justice Program for
Sex Offenders, Jill Anne Chouinard
8. Essentials of Empowerment Evaluation, David Fetterman & Abraham
Wandersman
9. An Empowerment Evaluation of a Comprehensive Sex Education
Initiative, Margret Dugan
10. A Google-Enhanced Empowerment Evaluation Approach in a Graduate
School Program, David Fetterman & Jason Ravitz
11. Similarities across the Three Approaches:Principles and
Practices in Common, David Fetterman, Liliana Rodríguez-Campos,
Abraham Wandersman, Rita Goldfarb O’Sullivan, & Ann Zukoski
12. Conclusion: Highlighting the Present and Looking to the Future,
David Fetterman, Liliana Rodríguez-Campos, Abraham Wandersman, Rita
Goldfarb O’Sullivan, & Ann Zukoski
David M. Fetterman, PhD, is president and CEO of Fetterman and
Associates, an international evaluation consulting firm, and the
founder of empowerment evaluation. Dr. Fetterman has worked in more
than 17 countries--in South African townships and Native American
reservations, as well as in Silicon Valley tech firms, including
Google and Hewlett-Packard--and has 25 years of experience at
Stanford University, serving as a School of Education faculty
member, the School of Medicine director of evaluation, and a senior
member of the University administration. He currently serves as a
faculty member at Pacifica Graduate Institute and Claremont
Graduate University. Dr. Fetterman is past president of the
American Evaluation Association (AEA) and the Council on
Anthropology and Education of the American Anthropological
Association (AAA). He is a recipient of honors including the Paul
F. Lazarsfeld Evaluation Theory Award and the Alva and Gunnar
Myrdal Evaluation Practice Award from the AEA; the President’s
Award from the AAA; the Distinguished Scholar Award from the
Research on Evaluation Special Interest Group of the American
Educational Research Association; and the Award for Excellence in
Research from the Mensa Foundation. He is the author or editor of
numerous books.
Liliana Rodríguez-Campos, PhD, is Director of the Graduate
Certificate in Evaluation and Professor in the Department of
Educational and Psychological Studies at the University of South
Florida. She is a former director of the Center for Research,
Evaluation, Assessment, and Measurement. Nationally and
internationally recognized for her contributions to collaborative
evaluation, Dr. Rodríguez-Campos is co-chair of the Collaborative,
Participatory, and Empowerment Evaluation Topical Interest Group of
the American Evaluation Association (AEA), serves on the board of
directors of the Evaluation Capacity Development Group, and is a
recipient of the Marcia Guttentag Award from the AEA, among other
honors. She has facilitated many training sessions and presented
her work in more than 30 countries.
Ann P. Zukoski, DrPH, MPH, has conducted research and evaluation in
community-based and public health settings since the 1990s, with a
particular interest in using participatory evaluation to assess
systems and policy change. She leads the Evaluation and Research
Team at the Office of Statewide Health Improvement Initiatives of
the Minnesota Department of Health. Previously, Dr. Zukowski was a
senior research associate at Rainbow Research in Minneapolis, a
faculty member in the Department of Public Health at Oregon State
University, a senior evaluation associate for the California Public
Health Institute, and a senior research associate at the University
of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health. She has conducted
research and evaluations funded by a variety of national, state,
and county government agencies, as well as private foundations. She
served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Berberati, Central African
Republic.
“This valuable book both shows and tells on the hot topic of
collaborative, participatory, and empowerment approaches. Each
'essentials' chapter gains impact from two chapters illustrating
what the principles look like in actual evaluation practice.
Beautifully explanatory, memorably demonstrated! The authors
emphasize understanding in order to select the most appropriate
stakeholder approaches for the situation at hand. Far from claiming
the exclusive benefits of any single approach, the book is infused
with the spirit of working together. The chapter on commonalities
powerfully lays out the features of stakeholder involvement at
macro-, mid-, and microlevels of analysis, creating a strong
theory-to-practice bridge for newcomers as well as experts. I wish
I could gift-wrap this book and send it express to evaluation
practitioners in fields from agronomy to zoology."--Lois-ellin
Datta, PhD, President, Datta Analysis, Kailua-Kona, Hawaii
"An invaluable contribution. This book adds very helpful
perspectives and insights to an enticing and alluring--but largely
still under-defined--set of evaluation methodologies. It provides
focus, helpful guidance, and more nuanced, differentiated
conceptualizations of collaborative, participatory, and empowerment
evaluation. The conceptual framing of the methodologies and the
inclusion of both domestic and international cases make the book
particularly helpful for training and preparing novice evaluators.
I really appreciate the simplicity and clarity of the writing, as
well as the specificity of the processes and procedures described.
This will be a useful core text for my graduate courses in
monitoring and evaluation for development practitioners, and I
expect my students to keep it as a reference guide when they enter
the professional field."--David Bell, EdD, Department of
International Development, Community and Environment, Clark
University
"This book uses in-depth case studies by experts in the field to
explore and highlight principles and practices of the three
approaches. I found the organization very useful. I particularly
appreciate the inclusion of concrete suggestions and timelines, the
information on how the approaches might be applied in different
contexts, and the attention to ethical concerns regarding working
with marginalized or vulnerable populations. Specifying ways that
the approaches can be used in one-time or multiyear studies expands
the utility of the volume. Students often express the desire for
practical information about how to conduct evaluations--this
practical volume, nested within theoretical and methodological
frameworks, addresses this need."--Isabel Bradburn, PhD, Department
of Human Development, Virginia Tech
“The authors provide a robust overview of the three models of
stakeholder involvement. Offering a thoughtful and informed
perspective, this book is a welcome addition to an evolving field.
It will advance evaluator expertise as well as stakeholder
participation, evaluation capacity, and use of findings.
Side-by-side case studies demonstrate the flexibility of the three
models under different evaluation scenarios while guiding
evaluators on the practical aspects of incorporating stakeholder
involvement in their designs."--Annette L. Gardner, PhD, MPH,
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Nursing,
University of California, San Francisco -
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