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Bloggers Week: Glenn O’Neil on Intelligent Measurement

Hello, I’m Glenn O’Neil, founder of Owl RE, evaluation consultancy and co-author of the Intelligent Measurement blog. Rad Resource – Intelligent Measurement: The blog focuses on issues and trends in evaluation, with a particular focus on communications, advocacy and development. Blogging since 2006, we average about one post per week.  Our blog has on average …

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Bloggers Week: Sara Vaca on Visual Brains

Hi! I’m Sara Vaca, an economist reconverted into an evaluator and at the same time Data “Visualizer”. My idea is becoming a full time evaluator somewhere in the world, but for the moment I’m happy working as an evaluator consultant for short missions, based in Southern France. Rad Resource – Visualbrains.info: In 2011 while on …

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Sheila B. Robinson on Connecting with AEA: Our Home, Our Tribe

Hello! I’m Sheila B. Robinson, aea365 Lead Curator and sometimes Saturday contributor. A short time ago, Nicole Vicinanza, a member of the AEA board, challenged aea365 readers to comment on this post and share whether they consider AEA their “professional home” and how they connect with AEA. As there was a gift certificate at stake for …

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Girija Kaimal on The pragmatist’s guide to successful long distance evaluations

My name is Girija Kaimal and I am an Assistant Professor at Drexel University. Several evaluations I have done lately have been conducted remotely. Long distance evaluations can result from a range of reasons: modest program budgets, location independence of the initiatives as well as, short turnaround times that preclude travel and on-site data collection. …

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Kylie Hutchinson on It Came Upon a Systems Lens

I’m Kylie Hutchinson, independent evaluator and owner of Community Solutions Planning & Evaluation (www.communitysolutions.ca) and regular Tweeter @EvaluationMaven.  Every year I adapt a Christmas carol to share with my colleagues and clients. This will be my third year sharing it with AEA365. Rad Resource:  This year the use of systems in evaluation really resonated with …

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Laura Beals on Library Access and Literature Organization

Hello! I am Laura Beals and I am an internal evaluator at Jewish Family and Children’s Service (JF&CS). JF&CS is a large nonprofit social service agency located just outside of Boston, MA. As our programs span a range of areas—parents and children, people with disabilities and mental illness, community services, and seniors—I often need to …

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Chi Yan Lam on Hidden Online Troves of Evaluation Resources

Greetings from Canada! My name is Chi Yan Lam (@chiyanlam) and I am a PhD student working in the areas of educational assessment and program evaluation at Queen’s University at Kingston, Ontario. You are probably already familiar with legitimate uses of Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook in relation to evaluation learning, but have you thought about …

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Sheila B. Robinson on Great Gifts for Evaluators

Season’s Greetings! I’m Sheila B. Robinson, educator and educational evaluator. I work for Greece Central School District by day, and University of Rochester by night. I’m also Lead Curator for aea365. Not surprisingly, I already got a great holiday gift – some time off from two of the three jobs (guess which two?)! I love …

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Dan McDonnell on Adding a Photo to Your Blog Post in Google Search Results

Have you ever Googled something and noticed a photo that has made its way into the search page (see fig. a)? This is a recent Google + feature called Authorship – a neat tool that allows Google + users to have their profile photo appear alongside search results for their blog posts. Not only does this create a link between your blog content and your Google + profile, but it also can increase the likelihood that someone clicks the link to your blog post via search results (by as much as 150%, by some sources), no small feat!

Dan McDonnell on Making New Friends and Mastering Lesser-Known Twitter Features Without Third Party Apps

Since its conception, Twitter has seen dozens of third party applications sprout up to make new features and functionalities available to users. While these apps (such as Hootsuite, Tweetdeck, Buffer and others), do offer new and interesting toolsets in the way of Twitter monitoring and publishing, many of these features are available in the vanilla (basic) Twitter client. For today’s Saturday AEA365 post, we’ll cover a couple of quick hit Twitter tips on how to use these standard tools to unlock useful features and find new connections.