The Short Answer 1. Start by assessing the result in terms of everyday experience, what we see hear, or feel about children ready for school or stable families. 2. Brainstorm a list of candidate indicators. Each entry is a data statement, e.g. % of children reading at grade level, rate … Read More
2.8 Where do we get the data for indicators? How do we get better data?
The Short Answer 1. Look at what others have done. There are many websites with report cards and data sources that others have used. (See tools.) 2. Get your partners to help access what now is produced. Sometimes the best data on child and family well-being comes from the public … Read More
2.9 What do we do if we don’t have any good data at all?
The Short Answer 1. Use the results and the experiential version of results to drive the process. Instead of asking “How are we doing on the baseline?” we ask “How are we doing producing the result we want?” How prevalent are the experiences which tell us about this result?” “Are … Read More
3.12 How do we select the most important ” headline” performance measures for my program or service?
The Short Answer 1. Identify the measures for which you currently have data. 2. Choose the most important using a forced choice process, asking: “If you had to talk about your program with just one of these circled measures, which one would it be?” 3. Identify your data development agenda … Read More
3.13 Where do we get the data to do this work? How do we get better data?
The Short Answer 1. Start with the data you already have. Most programs collect far more data than they use. Do not start the process by collecting new data. 2. Create new data where necessary. Be creative. Use common sense sampling techniques. Some data is better than no data. Full … Read More