Evaluation Capacity Building: What is it, and is a Job Doing it a Good Fit for Me?
By Dr. Brenna Butler
Hi, I’m Dr. Brenna Butler, and I’m currently an Evaluation Specialist at Penn State Extension (https://extension.psu.edu/brenna-butler). I graduated from the ESM Ph.D. program in May 2021, and in my current role, a large portion of my job involves evaluation capacity building (ECB) within Penn State Extension. What does ECB specifically look like day-to-day, and is ECB a component of a job that would be a good fit for you? This blog post will cover some of my thoughts and opinions of what ECB may look like in a job in general. Keep in mind that these opinions are exclusively mine, and don’t represent those of my employer.
Evaluation capacity building (ECB) is the process of increasing the knowledge, skills, and abilities of individuals in an organization to conduct quality evaluations. This is often done by evaluators (like me!) providing the tools and information for individuals to conduct sustained evaluative practices within their organization (Sarti et al., 2017). The amount of literature covering ECB is on the rise (Bourgeois et al., 2023), indicating that evaluators taking on ECB roles within organizations may also be increasing. Although there are formal models and frameworks in the literature that describe ECB work within organizations (the article by Bourgeois and colleagues (2023) provides an excellent overview of these), I will cover three specific qualities of what it takes to be involved in ECB in an organization.
ECB Involves Teaching
Much of my role at Penn State Extension is providing mentorship to Extension Educators on how to incorporate evaluation in their educational programming. This mentorship role sometimes looks like a more formal teaching role by conducting webinars and training on topics such as writing good survey questions or developing a logic model. Other times, this mentorship role will take a more informal teaching route when I am answering questions Extension Educators email me regarding data analysis or ways to enhance their data visualizations for a presentation. Enjoying teaching and assisting others in all aspects of evaluations are key qualities of an effective evaluator who leads ECB in an organization.
ECB Involves Leading
Taking on an ECB role involves a large amount of providing guidance and being the go-to expert on evaluation within the organization. Individuals will often look to the evaluator in these positions as to what directions to take in evaluation and assessment projects. This requires speaking up in meetings to advocate for strong evaluative practices (“Let’s maybe not send out a 30-question survey where every single question is open-ended”). Being willing to speak up and go against the norms of “how the organization has always done something” is an area that an evaluator involved in ECB work needs to be comfortable doing.
One way this “we’ve always done it this way” mentality can be tackled by evaluators is through an evaluation community of practice. Each meeting is held around a different evaluation topic area where members of the organization are invited to talk about what has worked well for them and what hasn’t in that area and showcase some of the work they have conducted through collaboration with the evaluator. The intention is that these community of practice meetings that are open to the entire organization can be one way of moving forward with adopting evaluation best practices and leaning less on old habits.
ECB Involves Being Okay with “Messiness”
An organization may invest in hiring an evaluation specialist who can guide the group to better evaluative practices because they lack an expert in evaluation. If this is the case, evaluation plans may not exist, and your role as an evaluator in the organization will be to start from scratch in developing evaluative processes. Alternatively, it could be that evaluations have been occurring in the organization but may not be following best practices, and you will be tasked with leading the efforts to improve these practices.
Work in this scenario can become “messy” in the sense that tracking down historical evaluation data collected before an evaluator was guiding these efforts in the organization can become very difficult. For example, there may not be a centralized location or method to how paper survey data were being stored. One version of the data may involve tally marks on a sheet of paper indicating the number of responses to each question, and another version of the same survey data may be stored in an Excel file with unlabeled rows. These scenarios require adequate discernment by the evaluator if the historical data are worth combing through and combining so that they can be analyzed, or if starting from scratch and collecting new data will ultimately save time and effort. Being part of ECB in an organization involves being up for the challenge of working through these “messy”, complex scenarios.
Hopefully, this provided a brief overview of some of the work done by evaluators in ECB within organizations and can help you discern if a position involving ECB may be in your future (or not!).
Links to Explore for More Information on ECB
https://www.oecd.org/dac/evaluation/evaluatingcapacitydevelopment.htm
http://www.pointk.org/client_docs/tear_sheet_ecb-innovation_network.pdf
https://wmich.edu/sites/default/files/attachments/u350/2014/organiziationevalcapacity.pdf
https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1272&context=jhse
References
Bourgeois, I., Lemire, S. T., Fierro, L. A., Castleman, A. M., & Cho, M. (2023). Laying a solid foundation for the next generation of evaluation capacity building: Findings from an integrative review. American Journal of Evaluation, 44(1), 29-49. https://doi.org/10.1177/10982140221106991
Sarti, A. J., Sutherland, S., Landriault, A., DesRosier, K., Brien, S., & Cardinal, P. (2017). Understanding of evaluation capacity building in practice: A case study of a national medical education organization. Advances in Medical Education and Practice, 761-767. https://doi.org/10.2147/AMEP.S141886