We use the ideas of evaluation to focus our team and partners on what matters most.

9

Our reports ask more about what really matters than what we are responsible for.

6

We ask questions to explore what counts rather than just collecting data.

9

We measure the changes in people more than we measure what we do.

9

Our reports are less about our outputs and more about our outcomes.

9

We do not use anecdotes as evidence of impact.

9

More of our evaluation questions are about how participants are doing and not on feedback (what they think) about us.

9

We ask more questions about the impact that is lasting after the program, not just the experience people have in the program.

9

We use questions to explore where participants are struggling, not just where they are succeeding.

9

We make evaluation a part of our program, not simply an assessment after our program is done.

9

We debrief with participants about the meaning of impact, not just give them a survey.

9

We design our questions as a learning opportunity for the participants, not simply a data collection opportunity for us.

9

We use guided interviews as sources of data.

9

We analyze our qualitative data for underlying themes instead of just using quotes.

9

We regularly use a mixed methods approach to data collection.

9

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