Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.
Panel
panelIconId1f3eb
panelIcon:school:
panelIconText🏫
bgColor#C0B6F2

Intended Learning outcomes

This page is designed to help you:

  • Understand what indicators are and how they differ from outputs and outcomes

  • Prioritise the indicators that are most important to your impact assessment

  • Start mapping indicators to help you measure change

You might already know what you want to measure, based on the outcomes you have mapped. However, it’s important to think about what you want to measure and how you will do this. What indicatorswill help you know if a change has occurred?

...

What is an indicator?

An indicator is information that allows us to measure whether you are achieving your desired outcomes. They show whether the outcome has happened or not. When you look at your Change Pathway, the outcome itself might not be what you measure but you might measure something that indicates that the change has taken place. Each outcome could have one or more indicators associated with it.

...

Indicators can be measured in the short-term, medium-term or long-term, and you might also emerge with indicators for your impact.

...

Subjective and objective indicators

There are two types of indicators. Ideally, you will achieve a balance of objective and subjective indicators. For example, a museum has more visitors to its digital site (objective) but visitors don’t feel that they connect personally to the theme (subjective).

Objective indicators represent facts - for example, income or visits to a museum.

Some examples include:

  • Number of researchers who would recommend Europeana Pro to a colleague or friend (short - long term, quantitative)

  • Number of times Europeana resources are referenced in published research since 2010 (long term, quantitative)

Subjective indicators represent opinions or perceptions - for example, enjoyment or quality of life. 

Such as:

  • Researchers in the Europeana Research Community who report that access to Europeana enables them to complete high quality research (short and/or long term, qualitative)

  • Pupils are more active or enthusiastic after working with an immersive heritage application (short term, qualitative)

Panel
panelIconIdatlassian-light_bulb_on
panelIcon:light_bulb_on:
panelIconText:light_bulb_on:
bgColor#DEEBFF

Tip

It can be tempting to focus on data that are convenient and easily available rather than on what tells the most important story. Avoid letting convenience determine what you measure.

...

Short quiz - test what you know about subjective and objective indicators

Are the following indicators objective or subjective?

...

Expand
title5. Conference attendees enjoy themselves.

Subjective.This is reported on subjectively, even if it can be collected in a quantitative way.

...

Learn from existing indicators

There may not be one gold list of indicators for us to use, but this doesn’t mean you have to reinvent the wheel. Standard indicators are commonly developed and used in cultural research and in other sectors, as well as in global cross-sector strategic initiatives such as the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Some may not be directly relevant for your work but it’s good practice to see if the data you collect can be comparable or benefit from following others' practices. 

...

You might also want to look at literature, case studies, or similar work that other organisations similar to yours have done. This will help you to further focus on what still needs to be measured.

...

Next step