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LGBT+ TIG Week: Trends That Have Influenced the Creation and Advancement of LGBTQ+ Evaluation by Eric Barela

Hello, I’m Eric Barela, a California-based evaluator formerly of Salesforce and now a co-founder of Altruous. I identify as a cisgender gay man and my pronouns are he/him. I have been a member of AEA since 2000 and in those 20+ years, I have noticed several trends in our field that I believe have informed …

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LGBT+ TIG Week: Meet the New LGBT+ TIG Leadership! by Dylan Felt, Alex Bauer, Esrea Perez-Bill, and Amy Lippincott

Hello and welcome to another week of AEA 365 focused on LGBTQ+ Evaluation! We are Dylan Felt (she/her), Alex Bauer (she/her), Esrea Perez-Bill (she/they), and Amy Lippincott (she/her), and we are the newly elected LGBT TIG leadership team of TIG Co-Chairs (Dylan and Alex) and Co-Program Chairs (Esrea and Amy). We wanted to start this …

LGBT+ TIG Week: Meet the New LGBT+ TIG Leadership! by Dylan Felt, Alex Bauer, Esrea Perez-Bill, and Amy Lippincott Read More »

Washington Evaluators Affiliate Week: Better Late Than Never by Evan Seidner

My name is Evan Seidner, and I am the Washington Evaluators’ Program Committee Chair and Scholarship Coordinator.

I’ve been an evaluator my entire life; but it took me until my final year of grad school to figure that out for myself. I was getting my master’s degree in international relations because it felt like the logical next step as I wanted to “course correct” back into a career in security studies. My first real job after receiving my BA was in Tokyo doing procurement and financials for a Japanese grain company because I had the language skills and the willingness to hop on a flight at any moment. While working there I traveled to meet clients across Japan and the US and other countries across Asia.

Washington Evaluators Affiliate Week: Zooming Out for a Broader Perspective: My Journey into Evaluation by Joanna Prout

Hi, I’m Joanna Prout! I do research and program evaluation, however I started my career as a therapist and psychologist. I spent years watching clients struggle to get effective and accessible treatment and support. Seeing these struggles showed me our need to get information to make services more accessible and effective, so I pursued a career in research.

Washington Evaluators Affiliate Week: Lessons Learned: A Map Is Worth A Thousand Words by Amy Kracker Selzer

I’m Amy Kracker Selzer, and I’m a Senior MEL Specialist working with USAID. I’ve worked in international development research for many years. Through that work, I’ve found that while some qualitative data collection participants embrace the opportunity to share their perspectives and tell their stories, for others, sharing the depth of information that makes for rich qualitative work doesn’t come as naturally. In these instances, I’ve found maps to be a particularly useful tool to help people organize their thoughts about a topic and generate conversation, especially when collecting data about community evolution and change.

Washington Evaluators Affiliate Week: Evidence-Based Medicine to Evidence-Based Policymaking by Esther Nolton

My name is Esther Nolton, and I am the Immediate Past President for Washington Evaluators. Like many of us in the field, I identify as an “accidental evaluator”—a person who stumbled upon evaluation and stuck around. As I reflect on my journey to and through evaluation, I am amazed by how intentional and logical my path has actually been. I hope my story provides an example of the fascinating ways in which people become evaluators.

CMM TIG Week: Google Tools for Multi-site Evaluation by Audrey Roerrer

Hi, I’m Audrey Rorrer and I’m an evaluator for the Center for Education Innovation in the College of Computing and Informatics at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where several projects I evaluate operate at multiple locations across the country.  Multisite evaluations are loaded with challenges, such as data collection integrity, evaluation training for local project leaders, and the cost of resources. My go-to resource has become Google because it’s cost-effective both in terms of efficiency and budget (it’s free). I’ve used it as a data collection tool and resource dissemination tool.