Psychology Techniques - Program Evaluation
Psychology Techniques - Program Evaluation
Periodic outside evaluation of every academic department is now a necessity at many private colleges and most public colleges as well. The assessment classically centers on the curriculum, equipment, and services, but may also include other department concerns. The consultant, a former psychology department chair, conducts evaluations of psychology departments at private and public colleges and universities.
In addition, she is also an examiner for the International Baccalaureate, part of the American Psychological Association's Departmental Consulting Service, a skilled idealistic evaluator for New England Association of Schools and Colleges, and an American Psychological Association Site Visitor for official approval of doctoral programs.
Project evaluation is an efficient method for collecting,  analyzing, and using information to answer questions about projects, policies  and programs, mainly about their effectiveness and efficiency. In both the  public and private sectors, stakeholders will want to know if the programs they  are funding, implementing, voting for, receiving or objecting to are actually  having the future effect, and answering this question is the job of an  evaluator.
  
Program evaluations are one of the psychological  techniques and it can involve equally quantitative and qualitative  methods of social research. People who do program evaluation come from many dissimilar  backgrounds, such as sociology, psychology, economics, and social work. Some  graduate schools also have detailed training programs for program evaluation.
 Program evaluation may be conducted at several stages during  a program's lifetime. Each of these stages raises unrelated questions to be  answered by the evaluator, and also different evaluation approaches are needed.  Rossi, Lipsey and Freeman suggest the following types of assessment, which may  be suitable at different stages:
    * Assessment of  the program's cost and efficiency
     * Assessment of the  program's outcome or impact
     * Assessment of  how the program is being implemented 
     * Assessment of  program design and logic/theory
     * Assessment of  the need for the program
 Assessing needs
 A needs evaluation examines the population that the program  intends to target, to see whether the need as conceptualised in the program  actually exists in the population; whether it is, in fact, a problem; and if  so, how it might best be dealt with. This includes identifying and diagnosing  the actual problem the program is trying to address, who or what is affected by  the problem, how extensive the problem is, and what are the assessable effects  that are caused by the problem. 
 Assessing program  theory
 The program theory, also called a logic model or crash  pathway, is an assumption, implicit in the way the program is designed, about  how the program's actions are imaginary to achieve the outcomes it intends.  This 'logic model' is often not stated openly by people who run programs, it is  simply assumed, and so an evaluator will need to draw out from the program  staff how accurately the program is supposed to achieve its aims and assess  whether this logic is reasonable.
 
Assessing implementation
 Process analysis looks beyond the theory of what the program  is supposed to do and instead assess how the program is being implemented. This  evaluation determines whether the components identified as critical to the  success of the program are being implemented. The evaluation determines whether  target populations are being reached, people are getting the intended services;  staff is sufficiently qualified, etc. Process evaluation is an ongoing process  in which repeated measures may be used to evaluate whether the program is being  implemented effectively.
 
Assessing efficiency Finally, cost-benefit or cost-effectiveness analysis assesses the efficiency of a program. Evaluators outline the benefits and cost of the program for comparison. An efficient program has a lower cost-benefit ratio.
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