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Intended Learning outcomes (ILOs)

This page is designed to help you:

  • Determine the focus of your evaluation

  • Have a clear idea about what part of your impact assessment you want to evaluate.

  • Feel comfortable with what we mean by evaluating your impact assessment process.

How to focus your evaluation

Your impact assessment will have followed a number of stages, whether or not you followed the whole of the Europeana Impact Playbook methodology. You could evaluate your impact assessment in different ways - we outline three of them and their pros and cons below. 

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titleHow to focus your impact assessment evaluation

Ways to evaluate your impact assessment

Pros

Cons

1. Each step in your impact approach (i.e. systematically going through each phase)

  • Ensures nothing is forgotten

  • Rigid process

  • Might take more time

2. The whole process (i.e. leave it open for your colleagues to share what they thought went well and didn't)

  • Most important discussion points likely to surface organically

  • Some aspects may have been forgotten about, particularly after some time has passed

3. Specific part(s) of your impact assessment (i.e. choose one or more parts of the impact assessment, such as impact measurement, narration, etc.)

  • Helps focus on improving specific areas of your impact assessment process

  • Useful if you don’t have much time

  • Useful if you are already very skilled in impact assessment and want to improve in specific areas

  • Your priority areas might be different from others in your team

  • May lose the opportunity to collect feedback and improve in other areas

Evaluating your impact assessment step by step 

Below we list a number of options you could keep in mind to help you start evaluating your impact assessment approach. You might not be able to evaluate some of these things because not much time will have passed. In other cases, you might have had a lot of time to reflect.

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titleImpact narration, visualisation and communication of your findings

Think about…

  • Perspective and objectivity. How did you respond to less positive results? How did your audiences respond to the narrative?

  • Constructing the narrative. Was there something missing?  What can be added or dismissed in the future? Could the narrative have been simpler, e.g. avoiding jargon, or more concise? 

  • Visualisation. Did a visual element(s) support your narrative? Was it effective? What would you change or improve in future?

  • Dissemination of the findings. How widely your findings were shared? Were there limitations in sharing the results? What could have been improved? 

  • Using the findings. How have your findings been used? What barriers have there been to change? 

  • Impact. Have the findings led to the desired impact?

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Next step