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Greene, Jennifer C. – Evaluation Practice, 1997
Advances the argument that advocacy in evaluation is inevitable when advocacy is understood as a value commitment to a particular representative ideal. The regulative ideal advanced in this article is a commitment to democratic pluralism. Three case examples illustrate these ideas. (SLD)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Case Studies, Democracy, Evaluation Methods
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Waysman, Mark; Savaya, Riki – Evaluation Practice, 1997
Describes the use of a mixed method approach to evaluate a nonprofit agency that provides organizational consultation and other support services to nonprofit organizations in Israel. Combining qualitative and quantitative methods resulted in a richly representative picture of the clients' thoughts and experiences. Benefits and disadvantages of…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Evaluation Methods, Foreign Countries, Nonprofit Organizations
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Van Ryzin, Gregg G. – Evaluation Practice, 1995
The use of cluster analysis, a multivariate classification technique, is advocated as a framework to guide the purposive selection of projects for multiple-case study research. A cluster analysis of a contrived data set demonstrates how the procedure is performed, and advantages and limitations are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classification, Cluster Analysis, Evaluation Methods
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Hurworth, Rosalind; Sweeney, Martin – Evaluation Practice, 1995
This article discusses four Australian case studies in which photographs and videos formed an important source of program evaluation data. In each case, background information is presented, along with ways the visual data were handled and reported. Where available, outcomes are presented to demonstrate the impact of the visual image. (SLD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Evaluation Methods, Foreign Countries, Photographs
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Yin, Robert K. – Evaluation Practice, 1994
It is assumed that evaluators of the future will still be interested in case study methodology. Scenarios that ignore a case study method, that look back to a distinctive case study method, and that see the case study method as an integrating force in the qualitative-quantitative debate are explored. (SLD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Research, Evaluative Thinking
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Owen, John M. – Evaluation Practice, 1991
Four forms of evaluation are outlined: (1) evaluation and development; (2) design evaluation; (3) process evaluation; and (4) summative evaluation. Each form is understood through five dimensions (orientation, state, focus, timing, and approach), which are illustrated through evaluation of a community services training program in Australia. (SLD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Community Services, Decision Making, Evaluation Methods
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Barrick, Christina B.; Cogliano, Janet F. – Evaluation Practice, 1993
The efforts of a committee to involve stakeholders, faculty in a department of nursing, in a program evaluation for accreditation, are described. Experiences over a five-year period are described, with an emphasis on strategies that fostered success. Implications for other educational evaluations are reviewed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Accountability, Accreditation (Institutions), Case Studies, College Faculty
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Fein, Edith; And Others – Evaluation Practice, 1993
The utilization of program evaluation is addressed and illustrated through the case study of a family reunification program at a New England child welfare agency. It is argued that evaluation is an exercise in power in an organization. Evaluators who understand power can work with the realities they find. (SLD)
Descriptors: Administrators, Case Studies, Child Welfare, Evaluation Methods
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Hennessy, Michael; Grella, Christine – Evaluation Practice, 1992
This case study describes an unsuccessful research proposal submitted in response to a request for applications for projects to implement and evaluate up to 18 innovative programs for homeless persons with alcohol or other drug problems. This unsuccessful proposal reflects several tensions inherent in evaluation research. (SLD)
Descriptors: Alcohol Abuse, Case Studies, Drug Abuse, Evaluation Methods
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McTaggart, Robin – Evaluation Practice, 1991
A case study illustrates the ways in which local reactions to a program evaluation directly threaten its validity, and shows that not all participants in a qualitative evaluation study understand or defer to the commitments of democratic evaluation. Ethical concerns in program evaluation are considered. (SLD)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Case Studies, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethics
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Slaughter, Helen B. – Evaluation Practice, 1991
Difficulties faced in evaluations that include data in a language not native to the evaluators or that lie outside the evaluators' cultural experience are discussed. Improvements to credibility and fairness from using a cross-cultural, bilingual evaluation are described and illustrated through evaluation of a language immersion program in Hawaii.…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Case Studies, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Awareness
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Ross, John A.; Regan, Ellen – Evaluation Practice, 1993
A four-step procedure is described for using evaluation to contribute to the knowledge that intake staff need to assign clients to treatment programs. The procedure is illustrated with data from the evaluation of a professional development program delivered to 35 teacher consultants in Ontario (Canada). (SLD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Clinical Diagnosis, Consultants, Educational Assessment
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Bender, Titus; And Others – Evaluation Practice, 1993
Resource constraints can limit the size of research projects. Dealing with these limitations and reaping the advantages of larger studies through formation of a short-term consortium are discussed and illustrated through a case study of United Way agency members. Problems and advantages of the method are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Community Involvement, Community Needs, Community Planning