Studyspark Study Document

Politics and Program Evaluation Getting Research Paper

Pages:5 (1467 words)

Sources:5

Subject:Politics

Topic:Politics

Document Type:Research Paper

Document:#60137546


25). On the other hand, there is often an assumption on the part of the users that evaluations are "an ivory tower process…too late to be useful, too full of jargon to be understood, too lengthy [to read]…, and too likely to be answering a question quite different from the policy question originally posed" (Ibid).

The last user complaint set forth by Chelimsky -- that the question answered is often not the question posed -- points to the problem of what role, if any, the policy makers themselves should have in forming the evaluation criteria. This problem was a source of pointed debate after the publication of the Equality of Educational Opportunity Study (also known as "the Coleman Report") in 1966. This study was commissioned by the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to determine the effectiveness of the Civil Rights Act in ensuring equal educational opportunities for people of all race, color, religion, and national origin. It found that disparities in educational opportunities remained high, not as a factor of race or religion, but as a factor of socio-economic conditions. While it highlighted the need for a war on poverty, it also gave segregationalists statistical fuel for the argument that school integration would have no effect on equalizing educational opportunities.

This led Glen Cain and Harold Watts to question Coleman's methodology in their 1970 paper "Problems in Making Policy Inference from the Coleman Report." In this critique, they argued that Coleman chose his variables based on "broad and disinterested scientific concerns" (Rothbart 1975, p.23). While this seems an entirely appropriate approach to determining variables from a social scientist's standpoint, Cain and Watts argued that the social scientist must also play the role of social engineer, claiming that variables must be chosen "for their potential role in policy manipulation" (Ibid). In his reply, Coleman retorted that his job was one of scientific discovery, not outcome manipulation.

If the evaluation process must proceed as a joint effort between evaluators and policy deciders, and if those two parties are often so opposed in their objectives, what is the best course of action to ensure evaluations that are both scientifically accurately and politically relevant? Chelimsky suggests that "evaluation can no longer be seen as completely a creature of the evaluator's choosing. " Instead, she argues, the evaluative questions must be determined by the decision makers themselves. While this seems to leave open the possibility of biased evaluations skewed to serve political purposes, one must keep in mind that the evaluation itself exists to serve political purposes. If it does not serve those purposes, it is useless. Weiss (1973) seemed to concur with this stance, pointing out that "only with sensitivity to the politics of evaluation research can the evaluator be as strategically useful as he should be" (qtd. In Cheminsky 1987, p. 24 ).

This focus on utility, both of the evaluation and by extension the evaluator, may seem to violate the rules of precision governing the social scientist. However, a program evaluation cannot be viewed as a scientific artifact designed to provide knowledge for knowledge's sake. It is from beginning to end a tool for policy determination, and as such it cannot be divorced from its political implications. This does not mean, however, that the evaluator exists only to serve the agenda of the political operative, or that the decision to create evaluations according to their political utility more than their scientific utility should be seen as a corruption of the evaluative process. On the contrary, Cheminsky (1987) explains, the establishment of a legacy of useful program evaluations constitutes "a contribution systematic, scholarly, independent, critical thinking to the decision making process" (p.26). Such a contribution can only serve to fulfill the program evaluator's desire to play an integral role in the improvement of society through public policy.

Works Cited

Berk, Richard a. And Peter Rossi. (1999). Thinking about Program Evaluation, 2nd Ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Besharov, Douglas J. And Terry W. Hartle. (1985, Dec. 28). Put Politics Aside and Help the Head Start Program. The New York Times. Retrieved on June 5, 2010 from http://www.welfareacademy.org. [Web]

Chelimsky, Eleanor. (1987, November). The Politics of Program Evaluation. Society, Vol. 25, No. 1, p. 24-32.

Chen, Huey-tsyh. (2005).…


Sample Source(s) Used

Works Cited

Berk, Richard a. And Peter Rossi. (1999). Thinking about Program Evaluation, 2nd Ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Besharov, Douglas J. And Terry W. Hartle. (1985, Dec. 28). Put Politics Aside and Help the Head Start Program. The New York Times. Retrieved on June 5, 2010 from http://www.welfareacademy.org. [Web]

Chelimsky, Eleanor. (1987, November). The Politics of Program Evaluation. Society, Vol. 25, No. 1, p. 24-32.

Chen, Huey-tsyh. (2005). Practical Program Evaluation: Assessing and Improving Planning, Implementation, and Effectiveness. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Politics a Policy Issue in

Pages: 8 (2723 words) Sources: 8 Subject: Teaching Document: #66406281

Superintendents must deal with student populations that change yearly as school choice options alter. These alterations will influence schools that have to present school choice, and schools that do not get Title 1 funds. The child who uses school choice does not have to attend another Title 1 school. They may decide to go to a school that does not get Title 1 funding (Whitney, 2011). Evaluation of the Effect

Studyspark Study Document

New Consultants Onboarding Program

Pages: 17 (5058 words) Subject: Business - Human Resources Document: #54170933

Onboarding Program for New ConsultantsThis paper is my own work that I created specifically for this course and this section. All research or material I used in preparing this paper has been properly acknowledged within the assignment in accordance with academic standards for complete and accurate citation of sources.COVER MEMOTO: Mr. Anderson Green, Director of Human ResourcesFROM: (Name), Manager of TrainingDATE: October 26, 2023SUBJECT: An Effective Onboarding Program for New

Studyspark Study Document

Politics of Participation

Pages: 9 (2842 words) Sources: 12 Subject: Government Document: #61122984

Community Participation Examining & Weighing Community Participation Community means more than people who live in proximity and occupy the same relative environment. Community, when in reference to terms such as community participation and community engagement, means several orders of interaction and motivation. People who participate in their communities are internally motivated. They care about the community socially, culturally, environmentally, economically, and otherwise; their motivation extends into action that supports their belief in

Studyspark Study Document

Federal Grants in Aid Programs

Pages: 11 (3570 words) Sources: 10 Subject: Business - Management Document: #6816817

These steps have been reiterated within the effectual conditions in the market. The marketing techniques used normally relate to the essential features of reflecting the best approaches of work within the government. This happens as done in the United States of America and many other nations that strive to live within a sound mechanism of growth and development in the field. As a way reflecting the best forms of

Studyspark Study Document

Economic Evaluation in Health Care

Pages: 11 (3917 words) Sources: 20 Subject: Healthcare Document: #26014535

Healthcare Economics Evaluation This report is about a proposed healthcare economics investigation. Some early research has been done and will be described based on what was found and how it was found. The report will conclude with a proposed plan for further economic evaluation on that same topic with a great deal the expected and proper form and function of that research to be described in that section. A conclusion will

Studyspark Study Document

CIO Magazine Analysis Critical Evaluation of the

Pages: 3 (903 words) Sources: 2 Subject: Business - Management Document: #8031558

CIO Magazine Analysis Critical Evaluation of the CIO Magazine Article The Whole . . . is More than its Parts The article The Whole . . . is More than its Parts illustrates the complexities, challenges and decisions that must be made in order for an enterprise to unify its many applications, databases, systems and platforms to serve a common strategic purpose. The article was published May 31, 2000 when integration options within

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".