Loading...

Evaluation Practice Reconsidered

by Thomas A. Schwandt (Author)
©2002 Textbook XII, 226 Pages
Series: Counterpoints, Volume 211

Summary

Evaluation Practice Reconsidered encourages a new way of thinking about the activity of judging the merit, worth, or significance of some human action, such as a policy, program, or project. Yet, it is not about another model or methodology for evaluation. Taken collectively, the ideas explored here suggest a way of reasoning about and engaging in evaluation that is not bound either to the characterization of evaluation as applied social science that is not bound either to the characterization of evaluation as a professional practice of experts. Rather, the book explores evaluation as practical hermeneutics. Conceived in this way, evaluation is about acquiring an action-oriented self understanding that is continuous with our ordinary ways of thinking and actions in everyday life.

Details

Pages
XII, 226
Year
2002
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820457055
Language
English
Keywords
merit worth significance policy project
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2002. XII, 226 pp.

Biographical notes

Thomas A. Schwandt (Author)

The Author: Thomas A. Schwandt is Professor of Education at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where he also holds an appointment in the Unit of Criticism and Interpretive Theory. He has lectured and held visiting appointments at several institutes and universities throughout Scandinavia. His scholarship is concerned with philosophical issues in interpretive methodologies, social science epistemology, and theory of evaluation. He is the author of the Dictionary of Qualitative Inquiry, Second Edition, as well as numerous papers in professional journals.

Previous

Title: Evaluation Practice Reconsidered