Publication | Closed Access
Principles, Approaches, and Methods for Evaluation in Indigenous Contexts: A Grey Literature Scoping Review
27
Citations
4
References
2019
Year
OrganizationsProgram ImplementationEducationIndigenous PeopleResearch EvaluationIndigenous MovementSocial SciencesProgram EvaluationIndigenous StudyQualitative InterpretationIndigenous ContextsCultural DiversityIndigenous HistoryIndigenous GovernanceEvaluation MethodologyIndigenous LiteratureIndigenous CulturesIndigenous HeritageCommunity EngagementEvaluationIndigenous RightsGrey LiteratureCommunity ParticipationCulturePerformance StudiesIndigenous IdentityCommunity DevelopmentIndigenous Knowledge SystemsNew ZealandIndigenous StudiesEthnographyAnthropologyEducational EvaluationCommunity StudiesEvaluation TechniqueCultural AnthropologyEducational Program Development
Abstract: This article describes findings from a scoping review of the grey literature to identify principles, approaches, methods, tools, and frameworks for conducting program evaluation in Indigenous contexts, reported from 2000–2015 in Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. It includes consultation with key informants to validate and enrich interpretation of findings. The fifteen guiding principles, and the approaches, methods, tools, and frameworks identified through this review may be used as a starting point for evaluators and communities to initiate discussion about how to conduct their evaluation in their communities, and which approaches, methods, tools, or frameworks would be contextually appropriate.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1