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EEE TIG Week: Tom Archibald on Whose Extension Counts?

EEE TIG Week: Tom Archibald on Whose Extension Counts?

Hello, I’m Tom Archibald, Assistant Professor and Extension Specialist in the Department of Agricultural, Leadership, and Community Education at Virginia Tech.

Debates about what counts as credible evidence in program evaluation and applied social science research have been ongoing for at least 20 years.

Rad Resource: Those debates are summarized well in a very helpful book on this very question edited by Stewart Donaldson, Tina Christie, and Mel Mark. In particular, the book provides a balance of viewpoints from both proponents and detractors of the position that experimental approaches are the “gold standard,” the best route to credible evidence.

Even long before that, questions of how to generate valid knowledge of the world around us—and specifically the role of experimentation—animated the scientific and aristocratic classes alike. In Leviathan and the Air Pump, Simon Schaffer and Steven Shapin examined the debate between Robert Boyle and Thomas Hobbes over Boyle’s air-pump experiments in the 1660s, exploring acceptable methods of knowledge production and societal factors related to different knowledge systems.

The point of this post is this: Seemingly esoteric methodological debates about credible evidence are in fact fundamentally important political questions about life. This point is summed up by Bill Trochim and Michael Scriven, who said, respectively:

“The gold standard debate is one of the most important controversies in contemporary evaluation and applied social sciences. It’s at the heart of how we go about trying to understand the world around us. It is integrally related to what we think science is and how it relates to practice. There is a lot at stake.” (W. Trochim, unpublished speech transcript, September 10, 2007)

“This issue is not a mere academic dispute, and should be treated as one involving the welfare of very many people, not just the egos of a few.” (Scriven, 2008, p. 24)

 Hot Tip: Epistemological politics (the ways in which power and privilege position some ways of knowing as ‘better’ and hierarchically ‘above’ other ways of knowing) are inextricably linked with ontological politics (whose reality counts, and how some reals are made to be more or less real, in practice, through various tacit or explicit power plays).

In the context of Cooperative Extension, and more specifically in the search for credible evidence about Extension, this nexus of epistemological and ontological politics raises the question: What is Extension?

For some (according to my research described here), it is a vehicle for dissemination of scientific information. For others, it is a site for grassroots knowledge sharing and deliberative democracy.

And, given that there appear to be (at least) a plurality of metanarratives about what Extension is, or (perhaps) an actual plurality of Extensions, the question then follows (playing on Robert Chambers’ influential title, Whose Reality Counts): Whose Extension counts?

The American Evaluation Association is celebrating Extension Education Evaluation (EEE) TIG Week with our colleagues in the EEE AEA Topical Interest Group. The contributions all this week to aea365 come from our EEE TIG members. Do you have questions, concerns, kudos, or content to extend this aea365 contribution? Please add them in the comments section for this post on the aea365 webpage so that we may enrich our community of practice. Would you like to submit an aea365 Tip? Please send a note of interest to aea365@eval.org. aea365 is sponsored by the American Evaluation Association and provides a Tip-a-Day by and for evaluators.

 

1 thought on “EEE TIG Week: Tom Archibald on Whose Extension Counts?”

  1. Pingback: Whose Extension Counts? – eXtension Evaluation Community Blog

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