Outcomes Measurement
Data Collection
Methods |
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Creating a Plan for Your Outcome Measurement System
Page: 1 | 2Once you have identified the data collection methods you intend to use, you need to decide when you will collect the data and how often. Then consider the procedures you need to put in place to ensure your outcome measurement system is sustainable and produces quality data.
Frequency and Scheduling of Data Collection
The table below describes the five approaches or designs you are
likely to use for your data collection.
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The first three approaches in the table are fairly self-explanatory; the last two approaches need a little discussion. Comparison groups can be very useful in demonstrating the success of your intervention. The main question is can you find a group of people or organizations that is just like the group with whom you are working? In order to provide a valid comparison, the two groups must have the same general characteristics. A similar group may be difficult to find. However, if you are working with different groups at different times and the groups are similar, this approach may work for you. Or if, as the example of using a comparison group shown above, you have people on a waiting list for training who are similar to the people who have trained already, they may make a good comparison group. Or perhaps you might compare FBCOs receiving sub-awards with those who applied but did not receive them.
Comparative standards are standards against which you can measure yourself. There are standards of success in some fields (e.g., health mortality and morbidity rates, student achievement scores, teen birth rates). For intermediaries, however, there are unlikely to be many regarding your program outcomes or indicators. You can, however, compare your results for one time period to an earlier one, as shown in the example of using comparative standards in the prior table. You collect data for the first time period as your baseline and use it as your standard in the future.
When considering which approach is best, these questions may help you make a decision:
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Data
Collection Methods |
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