Empowerment Evaluation builds program capacity and fosters program improvement. It teaches people to help themselves by learning how to evaluate their own programs. The basic steps of empowerment evaluation include: 1) establishing a mission or unifying purpose for a group or program; 2) taking stock - creating a baseline to measure future growth and improvement; and 3) planning for the future - establishing goals and strategies to achieve goals, as well as credible evidence to monitor change. The role of the evaluator is that of coach or facilitator in an empowerment evaluation, since the group is in charge of the evaluation itself.
Employing lecture, activities, demonstration and case examples ranging from townships in South Africa to a $15 million Hewlett-Packard Digital Village project, the workshop will introduce you to the steps of empowerment evaluation and tools to facilitate the approach. You will join participants in conducting an assessment, using empowerment evaluation steps and techniques.
You will learn:
David Fetterman hails from Stanford University and is the editor of (and a contributor to) the recently published Empowerment Evaluation Principles in Practice (Guilford). He Chairs the Collaborative, Participatory and Empowerment Evaluation AEA Topical Interest Group and is a highly experienced and sought after facilitator.