2013
DOI: 10.1177/1098214013477235
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Understanding Dimensions of Organizational Evaluation Capacity

Abstract: Organizational evaluation capacity building has been a topic of increasing interest in recent years. However, the actual dimensions of evaluation capacity have not been clearly articulated through empirical research. This study sought to address this gap by identifying the key dimensions of evaluation capacity in Canadian federal government organizations. The methodology used, based on Leithwood and Montgomery’s Innovation Profile approach, featured semistructured interviews with evaluation experts and a valid… Show more

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Cited by 94 publications
(136 citation statements)
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“…Second, the authors cite tacit resistance to evaluation on the part of program managers. More recent research on organizational evaluation capacity building confirms that organization-wide evaluation literacy tends to promote evaluation utilization (e.g., see Bourgeois & Cousins, 2013;Newcomer, 2007). Third, and most interestingly in our current context, ".…”
supporting
confidence: 54%
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“…Second, the authors cite tacit resistance to evaluation on the part of program managers. More recent research on organizational evaluation capacity building confirms that organization-wide evaluation literacy tends to promote evaluation utilization (e.g., see Bourgeois & Cousins, 2013;Newcomer, 2007). Third, and most interestingly in our current context, ".…”
supporting
confidence: 54%
“…The concept of EC, therefore, constitutes an important element of our study's theoretical base. Even though several theoretical and practical frameworks have been developed to describe the various components of organizational evaluation capacity, we elected to apply our own framework (Bourgeois & Cousins, 2013) as the conceptual backdrop to our work; this framework was developed through an empirical study conducted with four federal government organizations and thus reflects the language, practices, and structures for evaluation found in these organizations, while other models of EC apply to other types of organizations. The framework, shown in its entirety by Bourgeois and Cousins (2013), essentially identifies six dimensions of EC: three of these dimensions illustrate an organization's capacity to do evaluation (Human Resources, Organizational Resources, and Evaluation Planning and Activities), while the other three dimensions focus on an organization's capacity to use evaluation (Evaluation Literacy, Organizational Decision-Making, and Learning Benefits.…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Evaluation knowledge and practice become better understood and increasingly used in organizations which resort to the implementation of intentional ECB strategies (Bourgeois and Cousins 2013). Shaping evaluation priorities at the organizational level implies developing processes like: (a) identifying important topics for dealing with organization's mission and objectives; (b) analysing the topics and revealing the logical connections between them; and (3) arrange them by previously established criteria and select priorities.…”
Section: Stage 1: Shaping Evaluation Priorities and Creating Institutmentioning
confidence: 99%