The SAGE Handbook of Evaluation

Front Cover
Ian Shaw, Jennifer C Greene, Melvin M Mark
SAGE, Jul 10, 2006 - Social Science - 632 pages
′This handbook thoroughly covers all aspects of evaluation, yet isn′t too technical to understand. It offers everything an organization needs to know to get the most out of evaluation′ - Nonprofit World

`The Handbook succeeds in capturing and presenting evaluation′s extensive knowledge base within a global context. In so doing it provides a useful, coherent and definitive benchmark on the field′s diverse and dynamic purposes, practices, theories, approaches, issues, and challenges for the 21st century. The Handbook is an essential reference and map for any serious evaluation practitioner, scholar and student anywhere in the world′ - Michael Quinn Patton, author of Utilization-Focused Evaluation

`Readers of this volume will find a set of texts that provide an evocative overview of contemporary thinking in the world of evaluation. This is not a book of simple tips. It does justice to the complex realities of evaluation practice by bringing together some of the best practitioners in the world to reflect on its current state. It is theoretically sophisticated yet eminently readable, anchored in evaluation as it is undertaken in a variety of domains. It is the kind of book that startles a little and makes you think. I highly recommend it′ - Murray Saunders, University of Lancaster

In this comprehensive handbook, an examination of the complexities of contemporary evaluation contributes to the ongoing dialogue that arises in professional efforts to evaluate people-related programs, policies and practices.

The SAGE Handbook of Evaluation is a unique and authoritative resource consisting of 25 chapters covering a range of evaluation theories and techniques in a single, accessible volume. With contributions from world-leading figures in their fields overseen by an eminent international editorial board, this handbook is an extensive and user-friendly resource organised in four coherent sections:

" Role and Purpose of Evaluation in Society;

" Evaluation as a Social Practice;

" The Practice of Evaluation;

" Domains of Evaluation Practice.

The Handbook of Evaluation is written for practicing evaluators, academics, advanced postgraduate students and evaluation clients and offers a definitive, benchmark statement on evaluation theory and practice for the first decades of the 21st century.

 

Contents

The evaluation of policies programs and practices
1
Role and purpose of evaluation in society
31
Chapter 1 The purposes of evaluation in a democratic society
33
Developing practical knowledge
56
Chapter 3 Evaluation for practice improvement and organizational learning
76
Chapter 4 Evaluation and the study of lived experience
98
Chapter 5 Evaluation democracy and social change
118
Chapter 6 Evaluation after disenchantment? Five issues shaping the role of evaluation in society
141
Chapter 14 Methods for policymaking and knowledge development evaluations
317
Chapter 15 Embedding improvements lived experience and social justice in evaluation practice
340
Chapter 16 Managing evaluations
360
Chapter 17 Communicating Evaluation
384
Chapter 18 On discerning quality in evaluation
404
Challenges and new directions
419
Domains of evaluation practice
439
Chapter 20 Evaluation in education
441

Evaluation as a social practice
161
Chapter 7 Government as structural context for evaluation
163
Chapter 8 The social relations of evaluation
184
Chapter 9 Intellectual contexts
200
Chapter 10 The relationship between evaluation and politics
225
Chapter 11 Ethics in evaluation
243
Current issues and trends
266
Chapter 13 Contextual challenges for evaluation practice
292
The practice of evaluation
315
Reflections on practice
461
Chapter 22 Social work and the human services
486
Chapter 23 Evaluation in criminal justice
512
Chapter 24 Evaluation of development interventions and humanitarian action
536
Similarities differences and challenges
559
Author Index
582
Subject Index
595
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About the author (2006)

Dr. Ian Shaw is S R Nathan Professor of Social Work at National University of Singapore and Professor Emeritus at the University of York, England. He was the first chair of the European Social Work Research Association (ESWRA) and a founder editor of the journal Qualitative Social Work. He has authored almost 100 peer-reviewed papers, more than 20 books, 60 book chapters, and various research reports. He has written extensively in the journals on issues arising from the relationship between social work and sociology over the last century. His more recent books include Social Work Science (2016) and Research and the Social Work Picture (2018). He is pursuing a graduate programme in creative writing, which sits alongside his interests in gardening, his local church, volunteering in his village shop, playing badminton (badly), and Bob Dylan.

Jennifer C. Greene is a Professor Emerita of Educational Psychology, University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign. She received her BA in psychology from Wellesley College and her PhD in educational psychology from Stanford University. Prior to Illinois, Greene held faculty positions at the University of Rhode Island and Cornell University. Greene’s work focuses on the intersection of social science methodology and social policy and aspires to be both methodologically innovative and socially responsible. Greene’s methodological research has advanced qualitative and mixed methods approaches to social inquiry, as well as democratic and values-engaged approaches to evaluation. Greene served as a coeditor-in-chief of New Directions for Evaluation and is currently an associate editor of the Journal of Mixed Methods Research and series coeditor for Evaluation and Society. She also coedited the SAGE Handbook of Program Evaluation and authored Mixed Methods in Social Inquiry. Greene is a past president of the American Evaluation Association.

Melvin M. Mark is professor of psychology at the Pennsylvania State University, where he also is Head of the Department of Psychology. He has served as President of the American Evaluation Association (AEA). He was Editor of the American Journal of Evaluation (and is now Editor Emeritus). A social psychologist, Dr. Mark has wide ranging interests related to the theory, methodology and practice of evaluation, as well as a general interest in the application of social psychology to evaluation and applied social research. Dr. Mark’s awards include the American Evaluation Association’s Lazarsfeld Award for Contributions to Evaluation Theory. He is author of more than 125 articles and chapters in books. Among his books are Evaluation: An integrated framework for understanding, guiding, and improving policies and programs and the co-edited volumes Social Science and Social Policy; SAGE Handbook of Evaluation; What Counts as Credible Evidence in Applied Research and Evaluation Practice; Evaluation in Action: Interviews with Expert Evaluators; and Social Psychology and Evaluation.

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