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Welcome to the 重口50度灰Blog

Australasia has some excellent evaluators. More than that, we have an evaluation community full of ideas and a willingness to share. The 重口50度灰has long provided a place for us to come together, at regional events and the annual conference, to develop our community together. Now we鈥檙e taking it online! The new 重口50度灰blog will be a space for 重口50度灰members 鈥 both new and experienced 鈥 to share their perspectives, reflecting on their theory... If you have an idea, please contact us on blog@aes.asn.au. Please also view our blog guidelines.

Evolving the evaluation deliverable: Ideas from #aes18LST workshop participants

By Gerard Atkinson

Have you ever felt like you have put in a lot of work on an evaluation, only to find that what you have delivered hasn鈥檛 had the reach or engagement you expected? I鈥檓 not sure I have met an evaluator who hasn鈥檛 felt this way at least once in their career.

It was because of this that late last month I led a session at the 2018 Australasian Evaluation Society conference in Launceston, titled 鈥Evolving the evaluation deliverable鈥.

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Igniting the evaluation fire 鈥 lessons from my first Ignite presentation

By Liz Smith

At the 2018 重口50度灰conference, Ignite presentations were introduced to light some fire in our evaluation belly. Ignite presentations are a set formula of five minutes and 20 slides with each slide advancing automatically after 15 seconds. Presenters have to concisely and quickly pitch their idea.

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Thinking outside the logframe: M&E frameworks for 鈥榠nnovative鈥 development projects

Word cloud image sourced from Google

By Denika Blacklock

I have been working in development for 15 years and have specialised in M&E for the past 10 years. In all that time, I have never been asked to design an M&E framework for or undertake an evaluation of a project which did not focus entirely on a logframe. Understandably, it is a practical tool for measuring results 鈥 particularly quantitative results 鈥 in development projects.

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Evaluation literacy in NGOs

by Alicia McCoy, Alison Rogers, Leanne Kelly

Evaluation in NGOs in Australia has evolved at a fast pace. Ten years ago, the evaluation landscape in the non-profit sector in Australia looked very different than it does today. There was less evaluation occurring, very few organisations had internal evaluation functions, and funders were often satisfied with output focused reports.

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Presenting for audiences - some handy tips for aes19 conference presenters

by Gerard Atkinson

There is less than two weeks to go until the , taking place on 15 鈥 19 September here in Sydney. For those presenting at the conference, it鈥檚 time to polish off your presentation skills and get your materials ready. In the theme of 鈥渦nboxing evaluation鈥, we鈥檝e unboxed the art of developing effective and engaging presentations and put together an easy guide you can use not just in conferences but in any presentation.

The blog posts offers a few tips.

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It takes a community to raise evaluation capacity: learnings from a successful Evaluation Community of Practice

by Florent Gomez

Have you ever tried to grow evaluation capacity across your organisation? And this, with very limited resources?

At the recent in Sydney, I shared some learnings from our successful Evaluation Community of Practice in the NSW Department of Customer Service (previously NSW Department of Finance) and other soft approaches to evaluation capacity building we are using in our department.

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Evaluating in a pandemic: why and how and when?

Covid-19

by Jade Maloney

Over the last couple of months, evaluators around the world have been grappling with the question of whether and how we evaluate in the COVID-19 context. What can and should be done now, and what should wait? How can we be most useful?

For a recent online session with 重口50度灰members, which Keren Winterford, Greg Masters and I hosted on behalf of the NSW Committee, I rounded up a range of reflections on these questions to prompt discussion.

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Evaluating programs in new normal times: Lessons from Constable Care, Western Australia

by Kwadwo Adusei-Asante

COVID-19 has changed our way of life, including how we evaluate programs. The pandemic has rendered conventional evaluation approaches difficult to execute, and programs have faced new delivery challenges. These are challenging times for organisations that are required to deliver programs and measure agreed outcomes for their funders.

This blog draws on my experience with Constable Care Child Safety Foundation in WA. During these uncertain times, we have been forced to think outside the box and adopt new ways of doing evaluation. Our focus has been on capturing evaluation data when 鈥榳hat works鈥 is preferred over 鈥榯he ideal鈥.

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Regional evaluators: why evaluation can鈥檛 do without them

Evaluating a strategic Townsville beach.聽Source: Ren茅e Madsen

by Ren茅e Madsen

Regionally-based evaluators 鈥 those living and working outside major cities 鈥 are a vital part of the evaluation ecosystem.  They bring the benefits of evaluation to areas where essential services can be thinly spread and under pressure to deliver the best possible results with limited resources. Regionally-based evaluators ensure that evaluation is accessible to those who would not otherwise be able to engage with evaluation expertise, and we represent the profession in areas it would not otherwise reach.

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