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DEVELOPING BESTFIT EVALUATION STRATEGIES

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Title: DEVELOPING BESTFIT EVALUATION STRATEGIES


1
DEVELOPING BEST-FIT EVALUATION STRATEGIES
  • John T. Snead, Charles R. McClure, John Carlo
    Bertot Paul T. Jaeger
  • Information Use Management and Policy Institute
  • College of Information, Florida State University
  • http//www.ii.fsu.edu

2
Introduction
  • Little research to date provides comprehensive
    assistance in determination of what specific
    evaluation strategies serve libraries best
    relative to specific library situational factors
    and contexts, data needs, and a host of other
    considerations.
  • With so many evaluation options available, there
    is a need to bridge information-need issues
    (i.e., situational factors, data needs,
    stakeholder questions, etc.) with evaluation
    approaches.
  • Understanding information needs and linking these
    needs to evaluation approaches requires
    evaluation strategies capable of providing data
    that library decision makers can use to address
    specific problems.
  • Identifying issues and factors that affect
    evaluation will provide researchers and
    practitioners with understanding and guidance in
    the selection of best practice assessment
    techniques that best meet their needs.

3
Best Fit Evaluation Approaches
  • Best-fit evaluation strategies involve matching
    the data needs of a library within a specific
    situational context to the evaluation approaches
    that are most appropriate to that particular
    situational context.

4
The Problem to Address
  • Identify which evaluation strategies supply the
    best data within specific library organizational
    and situational contexts for use to provide the
    greatest impact to improve library services, or
    enable libraries to better advocate the value of
    libraries to their institutions or the
    communities they serve.

5
Best-Fit Evaluation Strategy Considerations
  • What evaluation approaches are available
  • Which evaluation approaches might best meet a
    librarys data needs, either library developed or
    imposed by external funders/organizations/etc.
  • How to develop an overall evaluation plan that
    makes effective and efficient use of limited
    library resources
  • How to implement an evaluation strategy and
  • How to use evaluation findings to advocate for
    local library support.

6
Information Need Perspectives
  • Stakeholder type (i.e., who is requesting certain
    data)
  • Data or information need (i.e., what data are
    necessary or sought) or
  • Evaluation approach selected to meet stakeholder
    data/information needs (i.e., outputs evaluation,
    outcomes-based evaluation, etc.).

7
Stakeholder Perspective
  • Provide data necessary to
  • Answer a range of questions asked by various
    stakeholders groups (e.g., library boards, county
    or city executives, funding agencies, library
    patrons, state library agencies) regarding
    library services and resources or
  • Make informed decisions regarding a librarys
    range or availability of services and resources.

8
Data Perspective
  • Provide the data necessary to
  • Answer a range of questions asked by various
    stakeholders groups (user-centered evaluation
    perspective)
  • Make informed decisions regarding a librarys
    range or availability of services and resources
    (library-centered evaluation perspective)
  • Demonstrate value and effectiveness of the
    library to the community that it serves
    (community-centered evaluation perspective)
  • Frame the perceptions of the library in the local
    political environment (political context-centered
    evaluation perspective) and
  • Support the notion of the library as serving as a
    public good (customer-centered evaluation
    perspective).

9
Evaluation Perspective
  • Select most appropriate evaluation approach.
    Initial research indicates that most prevalent
    among evaluation strategies currently developed
    and used by researchers include
  • Output assessment,
  • Performance measures,
  • Outcomes assessment,
  • Quality assessment, and
  • An emerging evaluation known as the Balanced
    Scorecard.

10
Development of Best-Fit Evaluation Strategies
  • Library decision makers are often faced with
    difficulties matching their data needs with the
    appropriate evaluation approaches.
  • There are many different kinds of evaluation data
    that a library may need and evaluation approaches
    that a library might employ.
  • As a result, many libraries struggle with the
    problem of choosing the best evaluation
    approaches to effectively and efficiently
    demonstrate the value they provide.

11
Issues in the Determination of Best-fit Evaluation
  • Success with which libraries are currently
    employing a number of different evaluation
    approaches
  • Problematic evaluation efforts in libraries
    (i.e., historical but outdated efforts,
    mismatched evaluation efforts to data needs)
  • How library situational factors (organizational,
    community, other) affect the successful use (or
    unsuccessful use) of leading evaluation
    approaches
  • Library preparedness to engage in evaluation
    efforts and
  • Types of evaluations available for use, including
    the data each evaluation approach might produce,
    the strengths and weaknesses of each evaluation
    approach, and potential applications of each
    evaluation approach within varying library
    situational settings and contexts.

12
Factors in Determination of Best-Fit Evaluation
  • Purpose of the evaluation
  • Type of data needed
  • Knowledge and skills of library staff related to
    evaluation, data collection, data analysis, and
    data reporting
  • Degree of difficulty associated to
    understanding/implementing a particular
    evaluation approach and
  • Organizational and situational factors related to
    the library (such as available resources), its
    community, and its political/governing context.

13
Selection of Best-Fit Evaluation Strategies
  • Library decision makers need be able to select
    the best evaluation strategy given the
  • Specific program, service, resource use, or other
    item being evaluated
  • Situational factors unique to that library and
    its setting
  • Evaluation goals to be accomplished
  • Motivation for the evaluation
  • Availability of various data sources
  • Availability of staff and other resources for the
    evaluation
  • Diverse populations represented within the
    communities served by the library
  • Governance factors
  • Extent and availability of library resources to
    support the strategy and
  • Intended audience of the evaluation.

14
Best-Fit Evaluation Strategies
  • To understand the impacts, benefits, and value of
    library services and resources, library decision
    makers must select evaluation strategies
    appropriate to targeted data needs within
    specific situational contexts.

15
Future Research Directions
  • Resource-based Process assessment of the use
    and allocation of resources
  • Problem-based Process link specific problems to
    data needs and best-fit evaluation approaches
  • Multiple Evaluation Process - need to engage in
    multiple evaluation techniques to yield a
    comprehensive picture
  • Unanticipated Factors unplanned resource
    expenditures and assistance (i.e., aftermath of
    hurricanes, other natural disasters, etc.) and
  • Other Factors understand impacts of poor
    evaluation, or when no evaluation may be the best
    approach.

16
Conclusions
  • Libraries continue to engage in a wide range of
    evaluation efforts to assess services and
    resources provided to the communities libraries
    serve.
  • The evaluation environment is increasingly
    complex, and requires knowledge of multiple
    evaluation frameworks, methodologies, data
    analysis techniques, and communication skills.
  • The issue is not that libraries face a lack of
    available evaluation approaches.
  • The issue is selecting the approach or approaches
    that best meet data needs of a library from the
    many evaluation techniques that exist.

17
Thank You
  • Questions/Comments?
  • Contact information
  • John T. Snead jsnead_at_garnet.acns.fsu.edu
  • Charles R. McClure cmcclure_at_ci.fsu.edu
  • Information Institute http//www.ii.fsu.edu
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