Journal of Youth Development (Sep 2021)

Building Evaluation Capacity in Youth-Serving Organizations Through Evaluation Advisory Boards

  • Barry A. Garst,
  • James Pann,
  • Tiffany Berry,
  • Gretchen Biesecker,
  • Jason Spector,
  • Michael Conn,
  • Curtis Jones

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5195/jyd.2021.1077
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
pp. 52 – 69

Abstract

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Youth-serving organizations seek effective and cost-efficient solutions to build evidence and advance their impact. Some common challenges include choosing data systems or assessments, budgeting and planning for 3rd-party studies, and refining measurement and outcomes when programs expand or change. Evaluation advisory boards (EABs) are a low-cost solution to add evaluation capacity and can be mutually beneficial to both youth-serving organizations and evaluation experts. Previous research suggests that EABs may encourage meaningful use of data, support internal evaluators, and/or facilitate difficult conversations among stakeholders. However, there are very few examples of successful EABs in practice. This paper shares the perspectives of EAB members and organizational evaluation leaders from a large national after-school program, After-School All-Stars (ASAS), including (a) a description of the benefits of EABs, (b) how EABs may be especially helpful with the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, and (c) examples of youth-serving organizations’ EABs. The experiences and lessons learned by ASAS and its EAB are generalizable to other non-profit youth development programs. Recommendations for structuring EABs based on organizational goals are provided.

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