Title: Turning Well-Written Program Objectives into High-Quality Extension Impact Statements
1Turning Well-Written Program Objectives into
High-Quality Extension Impact Statements
- Barry A. Garst, Ph.D.
- Assistant Professor and Extension Specialist
- 4-H Youth Development
- Virginia Tech
- bgarst_at_vt.edu
- 2006 VCE In-Service January 18-20, 2006
- Charlottesville, Virginia
2Overview
- Importance of well-written program objectives
- Goals vs. objectives
- Characteristics of a well-written objective
- Practice!
- Types of impact statements
- Turning objectives into impacts
3GETTING STARTED
What types of program evaluation have you been
involved with in the past year (in any setting,
in any position)? In those instances, what did
you evaluate? Why was evaluation important to
you?
4Evaluation
- allows us to make decisions about our programs
(What do I keep?, What do I change?, What do I
discontinue?, What fits best with the 4-H
mission?, What program makes the greatest impact
in my community?, etc.) - allows us to gather information in a systematic
way using a purposeful process - leads to decisions and action
- helps us to determine what is compared with
what should be.
Henderson Bialeschki, 1995
5- allows us to determine if our programs made an
impact on participants - allows us to improve our program effectiveness
- helps us to justify our program expenditures
- provides us with results that we need to report
back to donors - provides us with information for future funding
requests
Allen, Stevens, Hurtes, Harwell, 1998
6- enhances our credibility (Our programs make a
difference!!!) - increases our personal and professional
satisfaction
Allen, Stevens, Hurtes, Harwell, 1998
7- Begin with the end in mind.
Covey (1990), 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
8- What are the goals of our program?
- What do we expect to happen to youth?
- What do we want youth to gain, learn, etc?
9Goals and Objectives
- Related to the needs, skills, and
competencies of positive 4-H youth development. - Helps to establish a direction for the unit 4-H
program - Helps to define what resources are needed and how
(and where) resources will be used - Helps to define what 4-H programs will be
provided - Specifically links desired outcomes to our 4-H
programs
10Goals and Objectives
- Goals
- Broad, long-range statements that define the
programs/services that are going to be provided - Objectives
- Specific statements (about the attainable parts
of the goal) that are measurable and have some
dimension of time.
11Objectives
- Specific
- Must be clear and concrete
- Measurable
- Must be some way to determine whether or not the
desired results have been achieved - Achievable
- Must be attainable and reality-based!!!
- Relevant
- Must be useful must have worth to your
organization - Time-limited/Time connected
- Must specify a time frame for accomplishment
Adapted from Edginton, Hanson, Edginton, 1980
12Situation
- A 4-H Agent learns that many of the youth in
his/her community lack communication skills.
Youth are performing poorly in situations in
which they have to speak in front of groups. - The 4-H Agent creates a 4-H public speaking
program to help youth to develop communication
skills. - The primary goal of the program is to improve
youths communication skills.
13Writing ObjectivesStep 1
- State the performance objective with an action
verb - EXAMPLE Youth will demonstrate proficiency in
giving an oral presentation... - In this example, the verb demonstrate clearly
defines acceptable performance.
14Writing ObjectivesStep 2
- State the method of performance which the young
person can demonstrate - EXAMPLE .by standing in front of a peer group
and discussing a selected topic - In this example, the phrase standing in front of
a peer group and discussing a selected topic
clearly defines how the behavior should be
performed.
Edginton, Hanson, Edginton, 1980
15Writing ObjectivesStep 3
- Identify factors or conditions that are necessary
for success (This forces you to be more
specific!) - EXAMPLE which has an introduction, main
argument, supporting facts, and conclusion - The phrase which has an introduction, main
argument, supporting facts, and conclusion...
identifies the necessary components of the speech.
16Writing ObjectivesStep 4
- Indicate how the objective will be measured
(Note There can be more than one way!) - EXAMPLE in 4-6 minutes.
- In this example, the phrase in 4-6 minutes
indicates the desired duration of the speech and
offers one way that the objective can be
measured. - EXAMPLE 2 making eye contact with members of
the group at least 3 times.
17Writing an Objective- Summary
- State the performance objective with an action
verb (What behavior do you expect from the
4-Her(s)?) - State the method of performance which the young
person can demonstrate How do you want the
4-Her(s) to demonstrate the behavior? - Identify factors or conditions that are necessary
for successful achievement of the objective Is
there a certain way (a best way?) to perform the
behavior? - Indicate how the objective will be measured
(e.g., numbers, dimension of time, amount of
something)
18Individual or Group
- Remember that goals and objectives can be written
for an individual (i.e., how you want one
particular 4-Her to perform/succeed) or a group
(i.e., how you want a group of 4-Hers to
perform/succeed). - Although most of your goals and objectives will
likely be written from the perspective of group
performance, be aware that both types can be
developed. - Examples of both are provided in the next slides.
19Putting it All Together
- GOAL To improve youths communication skills.
- OBJECTIVE Each member of a 20 person in-school
club will demonstrate proficiency in giving an
oral presentation by standing in front of a peer
group and discussing a selected topic, which has
an introduction, main argument, supporting facts,
and conclusion, in 4-6 minutes. - (Building on the last one) OBJECTIVE 2 Bill
will complete a 5 minute presentation to his
class with no more than five ums and
maintaining eye-contact with the class at least
50 of the time.
20Example 2
- GOAL To improve youths healthy food choices
- OBJECTIVE 1
- 85 of all 4-H club members will actively
participateby interacting with other group
members and asking questionsin at least four (4)
1-hour meetings during a two month period, during
which nutrition and healthy food choices will be
taught. - OBJECTIVE 2
- By the end of a two month period (60 days), 85
of all 4-H club members will be able to
successfully identify healthy foods from an
overall food list and be able to correctly state
why those foods are considered to be healthy.
21Example 3
- Goal
- Youth campers will improve their socialization
skills - Objective
- At least 95 of all campers in a group of 40
youth will demonstrate positive social skills,
through active participation in small and large
group activities 3-4 times per day, in which they
are playing, interacting, and talking with other
youth, for at least 10 minutes per interaction.
22YOU BE THE JUDGE!
Working alone or in small groups of 2-4 people,
review the following list of objectives.
Whats wrong with each of these? How could
each one be improved?
23ACTIVITY
Write at least one (1) objective for each of the
following goals -To improve cooperation among
4-H club members -To enhance 4-Hers
problem-solving skills
24Impact Statements
- An impact statement is a brief narrative
that summarizes the outcomes of your 4-H
programming. - Impact statements should relate to the goals and
objectives that you developed for your program
25Impact Statements
- Extension faculty are expected to report impacts
annually through EFARS. - Impact statements are used to report the
difference that Virginia Cooperative Extension
programs makes in the lives of Virginias
citizens - Impacts submitted in past years suggest that
many Extension Agents struggle with writing
impact statements
26Impact Statements
- Remember the logic model!!!
- An impact statement can be related to a
- Short-term outcome
- Medium-term outcome
- Long-term outcome
27Logic Model
Resources (Inputs)
Activities
Outputs
Outcomes
Impact
Your intended results
Your planned work
W.K. Kellogg Foundation, 2002
28The Logic Model Outcomes
- Short-term
- (Learning)
- Awareness
- Knowledge
- Attitudes
- Skills
- Opinions
- Aspirations
- Motivations
- Medium-term
- (Action)
- Behavior
- Practice
- Decisions
- Policies
- Long-term
- (Conditions)
- Social
- Economic
- Civic
- Environmental
See handout Some Ideas for Stating Change
29Impact Statements can be
- Quantitative (Numerical)- Number of participants
Percentage (75) or number (170 out of 200) that
experienced change - Qualitative (Anecdotal)- a short narrative
description of a program impact, usually from the
perspective of an individual participant - Combination of both numeric and anecdotal
30Impact statements
- (1) Identify the community problem/issue
- (2) Make a connection between the issue and
something that Extension/4-H is doing to address
the issue - (3) Identify the impact of the Extension
program on the issue (as it relates to specific
individuals or groups) in measurable terms.
31Objective ? Impact
- Well-written objectives can be tweaked into
good impact statements - THIS SAVES YOU TIME!
- Proper planning with well-written objectives
makes it easier to write impacts!
32Objective ? Impact
- Include the relevant portions of your objective
(audience, action verb, measurable elements such
as your dimension of time) - Use specific statements that identify how your
4-H program made a difference (which resulted
in (KEY WORDS which resulted in) - Include results from your evaluation to support
your impact (e.g., survey results, anecdotal
statements, interview results, comments from
parents, responses from teachers, etc.)
33Objective ? Impact(EXAMPLE 1)
- IMPACT (numeric)
- 75 of 4-H club members (100 youth) learned how
to give an oral presentation which enhanced their
communication and socialization skills. According
to 9th grade teachers at the local high school,
this program resulted in a improvement in
academic performance related to in-school
presentations.
- OBJECTIVE
- 75 of all 4-H club members will demonstrate
proficiency in giving an oral presentation by
standing in front of a peer group and discussing
a selected topic, which has an introduction, main
argument, supporting facts, and conclusion in 4-6
minutes.
34Objective ? Impact(EXAMPLE 2)
- IMPACT (anecdotal)
- 200 high school students completed a 4-H healthy
foods for healthy kids program. One participant,
who learned to make healthy food choices during a
six-week 4-H after-school program, reduced her
weight and has controlled her diabetes. She
attributed these results to 4-H
- OBJECTIVE
- Within 6 weeks, 85 of all 4-H after-school
members will be able to demonstrate an
understanding of healthy food choices by
selecting healthy foods from a food list and
identifying at least one reason why those foods
are considered to be healthy.
35Objective ? Impact (EXAMPLE 3)
- IMPACT (numeric)
- Participation by 300 students in a 4-H in-school
character education contributed to a decrease in
the rates of cheating within a one-year period,
according to an in-school survey.
- OBJECTIVE
- 300 4-H in-school youth will learn and practice
the Six Pillars of Character through
participation in a one-year Character Counts
program in which each student will complete at
least two character-related activity/exercise. -
36Objective ? Impact (EXAMPLE 4)
- IMPACT (anecdotal)
- Participation in a 4-H after-school electricity
club resulted in a 16-year old 4-Her being able
to successfully obtain a job in a local
electronics repair shop. This teen shared, I
didnt know a lot about fixing electronics, but
the basic understanding of electronics that I
learned through 4-H helped me in my interview
- OBJECTIVE
- 90 of all 4-Hers who are enrolled in a 4-H
electricity project book will demonstrate a basic
competency in electronics by creating a working
circuit within the first month participation in
an after-school 4-H electricity club.
37Objective ? Impact (EXAMPLE 5)
- IMPACT (numeric)
- Pretest vs. posttest scores on a citizenship
skills assessment demonstrated that 75 of
participants in a 4-H teen club (35 teens)
learned parliamentary procedure. This leadership
skill resulted in a higher functioning 4-H club
which contributed 100 hours of community service
within the next year.
- OBJECTIVE
- 75 of all teens will successfully demonstrate a
knowledge of parliamentary procedure by
successfully leading a group through the process
of making a motion within the first 4 weeks of
participating in a 4-H teen club.
38Objective ? Impact(EXAMPLE 6)
- OBJECTIVE
- At least 95 of all campers (120 youth) will
demonstrate positive social skills, through
active participation in small and large group
activities 3-4 times per day, in which they are
playing, interacting, and talking with other
youth, for at least 10 minutes per interaction.
- IMPACT (both)
- 120 campers ages 9-13 completed small and large
group activities during 4-H camp which emphasized
positive social skills. On a post-camp survey,
68 of parents indicated that their children
were demonstrating more positive social behaviors
at home following camp. One parent reported that
her son seemed more likely to share with his
brother.
39ACTIVITY
Using the objectives that you wrote earlier in
this session, write one quantitative (numerical)
impact statement and one qualitative (anecdotal)
impact statement
40References
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(1998). Benefits-based programming of recreation
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Unit one Introduction to program planning and
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(1980). Leisure programming concepts, trends,
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