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Burton, John Dylan – Language Assessment Quarterly, 2020
An assumption underlying speaking tests is that scores reflect the ability to produce online, non-rehearsed speech. Speech produced in testing situations may, however, be less spontaneous if extensive test preparation takes place, resulting in memorized or rehearsed responses. If raters detect these patterns, they may conceptualize speech as…
Descriptors: Language Tests, Oral Language, Scores, Speech Communication
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Stickl Haugen, Jaimie; Chouinard, Jill Anne – American Journal of Evaluation, 2019
The concept of power is a complex and often intangible aspect of the evaluation process that is frequently a focal topic among the conceptual evaluation literature concerning collaborative or culturally responsive evaluation (CRE) contexts. Unfortunately, there remains a significant theory to practice gap as power is often rarely addressed or…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Culturally Relevant Education, Theory Practice Relationship, Cooperation
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Easton, Peter B. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2012
Attention to cultural competence has significantly increased in the human services over the last two decades. Evaluators have long had similar concerns and have made a more concentrated effort in recent years to adapt evaluation methodology to varying cultural contexts. Little of this literature, however, has focused on the extent to which local…
Descriptors: Stakeholders, Evaluation Methods, Proverbs, Human Services
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Levin-Rozalis, Miri; Shochot-Reich, Efrat – Canadian Journal of Program Evaluation, 2008
Professional identity is a precondition for the establishment of a profession. This examines the professional identity of program evaluators in Israel. The field of evaluation in Israel has developed differently than in most Western countries--from the ground and with minimal governmental interference--and thus it is an interesting case study. In…
Descriptors: Evaluators, Foreign Countries, Program Evaluation, Self Concept
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Dutta, Mohan Jyoti; Basnyat, Iccha – Health Education & Behavior, 2008
In this rebuttal to Linn's critique (see EJ802887), the authors state that, while Linn provides a thoughtful critique of the culture-centered approach by questioning its feasibility, he missed the idea that the very concept of effectiveness is brought under scrutiny by the culture-centered approach, with the focus being on examining the universal…
Descriptors: Health Education, Community Involvement, Foreign Countries, Evaluators
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Tilley, Susan; Gormley, Louise – Qualitative Inquiry, 2007
Drawing from educational research conducted in Canada and Mexico, university researchers explore how culture complicates both the ethics review process and the translation of ethical research principles into practice. University researchers in Canadian contexts seek approval from university Research Ethics Boards to conduct research, following…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Researchers, Ethics
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Rouge, Jean-Charles – New Directions for Evaluation, 2004
In May 1990, the first evaluation seminar in Africa took place in Cote d'Ivoire. It was the first in a series of regional seminars on evaluation planned by the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The seminar was jointly presented by the DAC and African Development Bank (ADB).…
Descriptors: Evaluation Needs, Evaluators, Seminars, Guidelines
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Bank, Adrianne – New Directions for Program Evaluation, 1985
Although evaluation practice in Israel is strongly influenced by American thinking, it is also a unique local response to societal, political, academic, cultural, and interpersonal pressures. In this interview Arieh Lewy discusses educational evaluation in Israel and the cultural context in which it operates. (Author/BS)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Context, Educational Assessment
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Seefeldt, Michael F. – New Directions for Program Evaluation, 1985
Reflecting on his experiences as an evaluation consultant at the Suez Canal University Faculty of Medicine in Egypt the author discusses: (1) implications of the Egyptian political context; (2) adapting to the host culture; and (3) maintaining distance from one's own culture. Personal qualities to complement the recommended naturalistic methods…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Developing Nations, Evaluation Methods, Evaluators
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Rutman, Len; Mayne, John – New Directions for Program Evaluation, 1985
The substantial differences in program evaluation practices in Canada and the United States are discussed focussing on the historical context and the political and cultural environments. Program evaluation has developed in Canada to address the concerns of accountability of public funds in a context of economic restraint. (Author/BS)
Descriptors: Accountability, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Context, Evaluation Methods
Lethbridge Univ. (Alberta). Faculty of Education. – 1984
The document addresses challenges that a developmental and wholistic approach to learning presents in the area of educational screening and evaluation in native communities. The introduction considers the connection between wholistic educational evaluation and alcohol and drug abuse, where to begin, the role of evaluation in learning, and…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Alcoholism, American Indian Education, Canada Natives