12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another Box, July 2 2011
By Jasper "Jupiterwood" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Developmental Evaluation: Applying Complexity Concepts to Enhance Innovation and Use (Paperback)
A book for academics, great source of references and great if you need to write an article on evaluation. The book is also a sad reflection on the profession of evaluation.
Having stuffed evaluation into two neatly labeled boxes, Formative and Summative evaluation, Patton outlines the need for thinking outside the box. He introduces many fine concepts including emergence and systems thinking but then proceeds to revert to creating a new box with rigid boundaries and labels this new box Developmental Evaluation.
Now we have three neat boxes to choose from and spend time musing over which is the appropriate box for a particular evaluation.
Very disappointing! Why do we need a Phd thesis to tell us that life is messy or the difference between simple, complicated and complex? Why is the author so surprised by everyday truths?
The concepts in the book while valid, remain disconnected and separated out and the author clearly needs neat simple solutions that are defined, confined and documented by academics.
What is really missing in the book is awareness, a true openness to discovery, a large splash of humility and a commitment to accountability. So much could be learned from Paulo Freire and his Praxis concept or from Jane Vella's great book "How do They know They know" yet neither get a mention.
The greatest asset with this book is that it gives the evaluator permission and the authority from academia to move from the twin cells of Formative and Summative Evaluation for brief excursions into the defined and confined exercise yard now claimed and named as Developmental Evaluation. So sad that we need this permission to move towards reality !
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Practical approach to using complexity concepts in evaluation, Jan 31 2011
By Patricia Rogers - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Developmental Evaluation: Applying Complexity Concepts to Enhance Innovation and Use (Paperback)
Michael Patton brings together the rich thinking about complexity and systems approaches and shows how, and why, we can apply this to evaluation. While not all types of interventions need developmental evaluation, increasingly our interventions are non-standardized, adaptive and emergent, and evaluation approaches based on comparative agricultural plots cannot provide the evidence we need to develop policy and practice. Developmental evaluation shows ways to learn from and inform what we do.