Evaluation of a complex, multisite, multilevel grants initiative |
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Authors: | Rollison Julia Hill Gary Yu Ping Murray Stephen Mannix Danyelle Mathews-Younes Anne Wells Michael E |
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Affiliation: | a MANILA Consulting Group Inc., 6707 Old Dominion Drive, Mclean, VA 22101, United States b Battelle Centers for Public Health Research and Evaluation, 2111 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 900, Arlington, VA 22201, United States c RMC Research Corporation, 111 SW Columbia Street, Suite 1200, Portland, OR 97201, United States d U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Center for Mental Health Services, 1 Choke Cherry Road, #6-1108, Rockville, MD, 20857, United States e U.S. Department of Education, Office of School Turnaround, 400 Maryland Avenue SW Room 3W233, United States |
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Abstract: | The Safe Schools/Healthy Students (SS/HS) national evaluation seeks to assess both the implementation process and the results of the SS/HS initiative, exploring factors that have contributed to or detracted from grantee success. Each site is required to forge partnerships with representatives from education, mental health, juvenile justice, and law enforcement, coordinating and integrating their efforts and working together to contribute to comparable outcomes (e.g., reduced violence and alcohol and drug use, improved mental health services). The evaluation uses multiple data collection techniques (archival data, surveys, site visits, interviews, and focus groups) from a variety of sources (project directors, community partners, schools, and students) over several years. Certain characteristics of the SS/HS initiative represent unique challenges for the evaluation, including the absence of common metrics for baseline, outcome data, and lack of comparison group. A unifying program theory was required to address these challenges and synthesize the large amounts of qualitative and quantitative information collected. This article stresses the role of program theory in guiding the evaluation. |
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Keywords: | Program theory Program evaluation School-community partnerships |
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