Forming
an Evaluation Committee
It is useful for any internal evaluation
effort to be guided by an evaluation committee. This
organizing structure should be composed of individuals
from throughout the local community, school, and district
- if the project is implemented and evaluated at that
level. This committee should work collaboratively
with the appropriate technology planning and/or leadership
committee, and must be representative of the interests
and concerns of all stakeholder groups. It does this
work by...
It
is also important that the evaluation committee membership
represent a variety of stakeholder perspectives -
not, for example, only those held by individuals who
are considered to be advanced technology users, or
those in technology leadership positions. Bear in
mind that project evaluations are designed to answer
questions about technology implementations and their
impact on teaching and learning. Therefore, experience
in teaching and learning is at least as important
as being well-versed in technology itself.
A district-level evaluation committee might number
12 to 15 members and include district-level staff,
a board member, and principals, as well as classroom
teachers and technology specialist from all grades.
A school-level evaluation plan might be coordinated
by a team of 4 to 7 staff members, including teachers,
administrators, parents, media or technology specialists,
and even students.
It
might prove handy to use the Evaluation
Committee Composition Matrix (from SERVE's Planning
into Practice) as a worksheet when planning your
evaluation committee.
Managing
the Evaluation Plan
A formative evaluation is by its nature an
involved, lengthy process that must be actively managed.
After reviewing this Example
Management Plan (PDF), the Evaluation Committee
might use the SERVE- developed Evaluation
Management Plan Template (DOC) to document the
timeframe, person responsible, and resources required
to implement each necessary evaluation activity.
It
might also be helpful to review the accompanying Evaluation
Management Plan Activities Checklist (PDF), to
be sure that all possible evaluation activities have
been considered.
Finally,
once the evaluation plan and the plan to manage the
evaluation effort have been created, the entire effort
should be checked one last time, against the Evaluation
Plan Checklist (PDF). This tool examines critical
aspects of both plans and the relationship among their
parts.
Communicating
with Stakeholders about your Project Evaluation
Part of the success of creating a strong foundation
for ensuring success in implementing your project
evaluation begins with communicating effectively with
interested stakeholders. Communicating early with
those stakeholders who have an immediate interest
and/or role in the evaluation process is important,
as is keeping stakeholders informed throughout the
evaluation. Stakeholder roles can help define what
and when to communicate about your evaluation plan.
Use the Communication
Guide to help outline a communication plan for
your project evaluation.
Next > The Report: Communicating
the Results