A Collaborative Community-Engaged Approach to Evaluation for the Alliance for Research in Chicagoland Communities M. Mason, PhD, 1,2 B. Rucker, MPH 3,4.

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A Collaborative Community-Engaged Approach to Evaluation for the Alliance for Research in Chicagoland Communities M. Mason, PhD, 1,2 B. Rucker, MPH 3,4 D. Morhardt, PhD, LCSW, 3,5 J. Brown, MPH, 3 W. Healey, PT, EdD, GCS, 6 V. Rivkina, MPH, 7 K. Watson MS, MPH 8, G. Greene, PhD 9 1 Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine (Feinberg), Depts. of Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine, 2 Alliance for Research in Chicagoland Communities, Center for Community Health, Northwestern University Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute, 4 Chinese Mutual Aid Association, 5 Feinberg, Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer's Disease, 6 Feinberg, Department of Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, 7 Feinberg,Center for Healthcare Studies, 8 Apostolic Faith Church 9 Feinberg, Department of Medical Social Sciences Evaluation results have been used to: Report outcomes for grants and to institutional leaders. Guide discussions/decision making of SC and staff Shape reporting to ARCC partners/clients Publish peer review article/podcast: Progress in Community Health Partnerships journal: volume 7, issue 3. Inform funding application to the National Institutes of Health EWG members gained experience working together using CEnR principles, including co-learning, negotiation and collaboration Collaborative process added to the development of multiple tools as well as results analysis. E.g., CBOs pushed group to include community perceptions of NU, something academics were not as comfortable with. Using the logic model kept us focused and on track. EWG internal capacity for analysis did not match the richness of the data. EWG struggles with timely analysis and results communication. EWG changes to address this include: Anticipating reporting needs when creating tools Simplifying/limiting data collected. Response rate is an issue. EWG changes to improve this: Greater reliance on networks/colleagues to promote survey Avoiding survey fatigue by using the modular approach. Focusing on richness of data vs. # of completed surveys. There is no one best approach for all evaluation needs and stakeholders involved. In the future EWG will explore how the modular survey fits with alternate evaluation tools/methods. Evaluate our strategies to increase response rates. Increase reporting and application of findings. Consider a broader mix of evaluation tools for future efforts. Background Lessons Learned Methods Alliance for Research in Chicagoland Communities (ARCC is part of Northwestern University’s (NU) Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute and the Institute for Public Health and Medicine ARRC supports community engaged research (CEnR) through seed grants, capacity building, technical assistance, partnership facilitation, and advocacy for supportive institutional policies. Guided by a steering committee (SC) of community- and faith-based organizations, NU faculty, and public agencies. ARCC’s Evaluation Working Group (EWG) charged with developing and implementing ARCC evaluation strategy. Members include SC members (2 CBOs, 3 faculty, 1 staff) and ARCC staff including a program evaluation specialist. EWG leads evaluation process through meetings, teleconference calls, and s. EWG created and periodically reviews and updates “evaluation matrix” of ARCC evaluation data needs including funder reports, quality improvement & program development, and potential data sources. EWG consults regularly with full SC to ensure it is addressing critical issues and to provide evaluation findings. This method of collaborative evaluation differs from traditional models in that: multiple perspectives are engaged equitably from the start and throughout the process. The impetus for measures are tied directly to immediate program purposes, but are intended to serve as standardized tools beyond these uses as well. In January 2014, EWG fielded its first annual “modular” survey including the four survey tools in Table 1. The survey modules include screening questions so participants complete only relevant components. The survey is expected to close in May Acknowledgement: This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health Clinical and Translational Award UL1RR025741, & Northwestern University. Table 1: Evaluation Tools Developed by the EWG ToolPurposeNotes SC member interviews/ focus groups Obtain SC member perspective on participatory governance, progress toward goals Led by external evaluator/EWG formed during this time SC Member survey Measure investment in ARCC, utilization of resources, CEnR capacity On-line survey, first tool designed and fielded by EWG (spring 2011) Academic partner survey Measure CEnR capacity, barriers/facilitators, NU CEnR support On-line survey, low response rate (winter 2012) Seed grantee survey Obtain information on seed grant outcomes On-line survey, part of modular survey, still in field Community partners survey Measure CEnR capacity barriers/ facilitators, perception of NU CEnR support On-line survey, part of modular survey still in field Review evaluation matrix Review existing tools & lit Draft questions /sections Pilot questions developed Draft developed Pilot tested Survey refined & fielded Results Lessons learned inform this process Lessons learned inform this process Next Steps Collaborative process for development of evaluation tools