Are Focus Groups Still Relevant in Program Evaluation?
In the ever-evolving landscape of program evaluation, focus groups have long been a staple for gathering qualitative insights. As we navigate a world filled with digital distractions and shifting preferences, the question arises: Are focus groups still an effective tool for program evaluation? Let’s explore what focus groups are, when they should be used in program evaluation, and their current effectiveness.
Community Engagement
Community engagement, rooted in civic engagement principles and community organizing, has evolved significantly. Its importance has grown across the nonprofit, public, and private sectors, leading to varied experiences, definitions, and interpretations.
Our 2024 So Far!
The temperatures are threatening three digits, the operatic oratorio of the cicadas has waned, Nashville SC is on an unbeaten streak, and suddenly we find ourselves at the halfway point of 2024. We asked our staff to reflect on the first half of this calendar year; our team shared the following experiences, photos, and words that represent our year thus far.
Navigating the Long Game of Changing Systems: Part 3
Collaborating across organizations to address root causes and change conditions at the system level is a messy, long experience. There are so many different approaches - Collective Impact, Systemness, grassroots organizing, and so on - each with their own principles, frameworks, tools, and ways of doing the work “correctly.”
Navigating the Long Game of Changing Systems: Part 2
Collaborating across organizations to address root causes and change conditions at the system level is a messy, long experience. There are so many different approaches - Collective Impact, Systemness, grassroots organizing, and so on - each with their own principles, frameworks, tools, and ways of doing the work “correctly.”
Navigating the Long Game of Changing Systems
Collaborating across organizations to address root causes and change conditions at the system level is a messy, long experience. Over the next few months, I’m going to be exploring the life cycles of collaborative efforts and breaking them down into their essential elements, based on my own research, professional experience, and Elevate’s work in this space with partners working to improve systems across a range of issues.
DOES COLLABORATION WORK?
Somebody asked me the other day if I really believed in collaboration. We were kvetching about the challenges of doing Collective Impact work, and at the time, I sort of laughed it off and made light of it. But it made me think…do I really think collaboration - amongst organizations within a social service landscape, to solve a specific social challenge or improve outcomes for a certain population - works? And if so, what makes it successful?
Data Collection Audit: What are we already collecting?
You might be surprised at what great sources of data you already have! Whether data collection is being implemented formally or informally, odds are you are paying attention to the impact of your work as well as trends in the work more broadly.
Client Spotlight: The Chamber (New Skills Ready, TN BLU-SkillSPAN & Academics of Nashville Partnership Council)
Elevate supports the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce (the Chamber) as they continue to bolster economic prosperity efforts within the Middle Tennessee region and statewide. Across our service offerings, we provide strategy, planning, evaluation, and facilitation support for three of the Chamber’s Talent Development initiatives including New Skills Ready, TN BLU-SkillSPAN, and the Academies of Nashville Partnership Council.
Advancing Data Equity
A key concept we try to infuse into our evaluation work and encourage our clients to consider is the concept of data equity, which highlights the need for fair and equitable access to and use of data in evaluation processes.
What is Organizational Learning?
For nonprofit organizations, we want to be good stewards of the resources provided to us, therefore pilots and accepted failure may be scary concepts to try. However, breaking through an organizational learning disability and creating learning networks can start small, on the individual level, and embody the best stewardship of all: adapting from what you're learning.
Client Spotlight: Childcare Expansion Project
Since December of 2022, Elevate has been fortunate to work on a project that aims to serve childcare providers in Nashville, with the longer term goal of increasing high quality childcare seats in Nashville. This conversation has been happening for the last few years in Nashville, with more and more attention being given to it in the midst of mayoral races and the need for an increased workforce as more companies come to the city.
Storytelling: Demystifying a Dynamic Art Form and Tool
Storytelling is a dynamic art form and tool that we engage with across the service areas of our clients, transcending a singular form of use. In both its art form and tool use, the presence of storytelling invites Elevate staff into the operationalization of our mission and values as we partner with our clients in their impactful work.
Engaging Consultants to Increase Your Organization’s Impact
Running an organization is hard. In this blog, we give some helpful pointers on when it’s the best time to hire a consultant, what they can (and can’t) do for you, and so much more!
We Just Learned a Lesson – How Do We Not Forget?
What can organizations do to develop learning practices that preserve institutional memory?
Reflections from AEA and Staff Retreat
At the beginning of this month, our team attended the conference for American Evaluator’s Association (AEA) in New Orleans, and combined that trip with our annual staff retreat. We spent day one of our trip reflecting, discussing our individual and team values, and thinking about our priorities for the upcoming year, and the rest of the week in workshops and sessions at the conference. Here’s what our team has to say about their experiences.
Elevate Pro Tips for Building Useful Surveys
Surveys are one of the most common data collection tools we encounter at Elevate, and for good reason! Surveys can be a helpful and relatively inexpensive way to gather quantitative (and sometimes qualitative) data from respondents about their attributes, perceptions, knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors.
Reflective Practice @ Elevate
While there are multiple frameworks and structures for how to engage in reflective practice, at its core reflective practice is a process for learning through and from our experiences to gain new insight about how we show up in our work.
Facilitating Groups utilizing Emergent Strategy Principles
At Elevate, we have the pleasure of working with many different groups working towards changing the systemic conditions that are creating and reinforcing marginalization and injustice. We do this in a number of spaces, from early childhood to homelessness to workforce development, and in every situation, we’re challenged by the complexity of the systems, the scope of the challenges, and the nuances of the relationships of the people in the room. These spaces require us to be not only skilled facilitators, but also constant learners and scholars of the ways in which systems change can actually be brought about.