Produktbild: Empowerment Evaluation Principles in Practice

Empowerment Evaluation Principles in Practice

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

28.10.2004

Herausgeber

Fetterman David M. + weitere

Verlag

Taylor and Francis

Seitenzahl

231

Maße (L/B/H)

23.2/15.2/2.1 cm

Gewicht

426 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-59385-115-6

Beschreibung

Portrait

David M. Fetterman, PhD, is president and CEO of Fetterman and Associates, an international evaluation consulting firm, and the founder of empowerment evaluation. Dr. Fetterman has worked in more than 17 countries--in South African townships and Native American reservations, as well as in Silicon Valley tech firms, including Google and Hewlett-Packard--and has 25 years of experience at Stanford University, serving as a School of Education faculty member, the School of Medicine director of evaluation, and a senior member of the University administration. He currently serves as a faculty member at Pacifica Graduate Institute and Claremont Graduate University. Dr. Fetterman is past president of the American Evaluation Association (AEA) and the Council on Anthropology and Education of the American Anthropological Association (AAA). He is a recipient of honors including the Paul F. Lazarsfeld Evaluation Theory Award and the Alva and Gunnar Myrdal Evaluation Practice Award from the AEA; the President’s Award from the AAA; the Distinguished Scholar Award from the Research on Evaluation Special Interest Group of the American Educational Research Association; and the Award for Excellence in Research from the Mensa Foundation. He is the author or editor of numerous books.

Abraham Wandersman is Professor of Psychology at the University of South Carolina/n-/Columbia and was interim Co-Director of the Institute for Families in Society at the University of South Carolina. Dr. Wandersman performs research and program evaluation on citizen participation in community organizations and coalitions and on interagency collaboration. He is currently co-principal investigator on a participatory research study of an empowerment evaluation system, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and is working on a project for the program implementation and dissemination branch of the CDC center for injury prevention to facilitate a process and develop a framework on "how to bring what has been shown to work in child maltreatment prevention and youth violence prevention into more widespread practice." Dr. Wandersman is a coeditor of Empowerment Evaluation: Knowledge and Tools for Self-Assessment and Accountability, and has authored or edited many other books and articles. In 1998, he received the Myrdal Award for Cumulative Contributions to Evaluation Practice from the American Evaluation Association. In 2000, he was elected President of Division 27 of the American Psychological Association (Community Psychology): The Society for Community Research and Action.

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

28.10.2004

Herausgeber

Verlag

Taylor and Francis

Seitenzahl

231

Maße (L/B/H)

23.2/15.2/2.1 cm

Gewicht

426 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-59385-115-6

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  • Produktbild: Empowerment Evaluation Principles in Practice
  • 1. A Window into the Heart and Soul of Empowerment Evaluation: Looking through the Lens of Empowerment Evaluation Principles
    David M. Fetterman

    2. The Principles of Empowerment Evaluation
    Abraham Wandersman, Jessica Snell-Johns, Barry E. Lentz, David M. Fetterman, Dana C. Keener, Melanie Livet, Pamela S. Imm, and Paul Flaspohler

    3. Empowerment Evaluation Principles in Practice: Assessing Levels of Commitment
    David M. Fetterman

    4. Lessons That Influenced the Current Conceptualization of Empowerment Evaluation: Reflections from Two Evaluation Projects
    Dana C. Keener, Jessica Snell-Johns, Melanie Livet, and Abraham Wandersman

    5. Empowerment Evaluation: From the Digital Divide to Academic Distress
    David M. Fetterman

    6. Organizational Functioning: Facilitating Effective Interventions and Increasing the Odds of Programming Success
    Melanie Livet and Abraham Wandersman

    7. Empowerment Evaluation and Organizational Learning: A Case Study of a Community Coalition Designed to Prevent Child Abuse and Neglect
    Barry E. Lentz , Pamela S. Imm, Janice B. Yost, Noreen P. Johnson, Christine Barron, Margie Simone Lindberg, and Joanne Treistman

    8. Will the Real Empowerment Evaluation Please Stand Up?: A Critical Friend Perspective
    J. Bradley Cousins

    9. Conclusion: Conceptualizing Empowerment in Terms of Sequential Time and Social Space David M. Fetterman

    Author Index

    Subject Index

    About the Editors

    Contributors