Sale!

Workshops 1-3 – September 10, 12, 24, 25 & 26, 2024 – ONLINE

Original price was: $2,050.Current price is: $1,425.

Date: September 10 & 12, 2024
Time: 12:30 pm – 3:30 pm EST

Date: September 24, 25 & 26, 2024
Time: 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm EST

Location: ONLINE

Workshops 1, 2 & 3 Bundle

This is our bundle of Workshop 1: Wearing an Indigenous Evaluation Lens, Workshop 2: Tools for Change and Indigenous-led Measurement, and Workshop 3: Indigenous Evaluation Frameworks.

We are offering a limited number of coupons for customers who may be unable to apply for funding to cover this cost, such as students. Contact info@johnstonresearch.ca with the subject ‘Workshop Coupon’ and provide your name, affiliation, phone number, and date of the workshop for which you would like to attend to apply for a coupon.

Workshop 1: Wearing an Indigenous Evaluation Lens

Read more: Workshop 1: Wearing an Indigenous Evaluation Lens

Time for Change

Western approaches to evaluation have remained essentially static for decades.  Further, they don’t reflect the realities of Indigenous culture and experience.  It’s time to remove the barriers to Indigenous-led evaluation practices.

Embracing Reconciliation

Rather than divorcing entirely from Western practice, this course provides an exploratory path of reconciliation.  You will learn to recognize the intersection between Indigenous cultural foundations and the current, widely practiced, Western approach to evaluation. Evaluation approaches are shaped by culture and experience.  Hence, wearing an Indigenous Evaluation Lens is fundamentally different.  In this workshop we will build confidence in understanding the theoretical underpinnings of evaluative thought from our own perspective, and from Indigenous ways of knowing and being.

Building a Theoretical Foundation For Indigenous-Led Evaluation

By examining your personal perspective, Western theory, and Indigenous cultural foundations, you will have the tools to build methodologies and identify appropriate indicators for Indigenous-led evaluations.

Workshop 2: Tools for Change and Indigenous-led Measurement

Read more: Workshop 2: Tools of Change and Indigenous-led Measurement

Tools for Change

Soft data-related tools can be used for assisting with movement; however many tools can stamp-out development. A proper set of instrumentations and measurement tools should focus on the documentation of relationships. Relationships are time-bound but not in the way that the-self can make any kind of changing alone; rather the relation of self is fully related to one’s out-outside world.

Nothing About Us, Without Us

In an Indigenous setting, dialogue is preferred over a rigid assessment. Paperwork is seen as a secondary measure, the first measure rests in a human to human dialogue process with substantial growth potential. The threat to evaluation is how these growth intervals can be measured. Institutions need to be careful they are not assessing individuals, individuals need the space to assess themselves, because only they know how best to conduct that measurement. Current evaluation practice dissects the self from the family and the community.  The self is inseparable and asking Indigenous peoples to answer questions which are self-driven further damage their psyche and connections to the land and world around us.

Building-Up and Forward Movement

Poor education, poverty, inadequate housing, food insecurity and social isolation have been linked to long-term stress implicated in specific conditions such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, mental-illness and suicide (Minore & Katt, 2007; White & Jodoin, 2007; Bombay, Matheson & Anisman, 2009; Mikkonen & Raphael, 2010).  For example, a recent study finds that poverty (acute or long term) can impair one’s ability to make sound decisions (Mani, Mullainathan, Shafir & Zhao, 2013).  Loppie, Reading and Wein (2009) point to a progressive nature in the perpetuation of the social determinants.  For instance, poor housing is linked to domestic violence and injury.

A further layer of complexity in Indigenous evaluation are the difficulties associated with variability in the interpretation and definition of what seem to be basic and standardized terms through a Western perspective.  Indigenous peoples view health as not merely the absence of disease, as is emphasized in bio-medical models, but as the balance and interconnectedness in health and well-being of spirit, mind, (emotion) and body with individual, (family), community and environment (Ootoova et al., 2001; Edge & McCallum, 2006).

This workshop provides you with a set of tools and methods which will change the way evaluation works.  We will examine: 1) selecting the right indicators, 2) reasons why numbers should not  drive decision-making, and 3) developing intervention-based tools.

Workshop 3: Indigenous Evaluation Frameworks

Indigenous Evaluation Frameworks

This is the third in a series of three workshops on Honouring Reconciliation in Evaluation (HRE).  Workshops 1 and 2 presented the theory and tools for effective Indigenous Evaluation practices. In Workshop 3 we will study in-detail several examples of Indigenous evaluation frameworks.  The workshop will explore how Indigenous Evaluation Frameworks are effective in assessing results of a program/intervention/project and also how they have broader impacts on decolonizing the industry of evaluation practice and methodology.  The workshop explores Indigenous Evaluation frameworks that are applicable to single local evaluation practice as well as national and regional efforts.

Indigenous Evaluation Frameworks is lead by Indigenous Peoples to systematically shape their self-determination through evaluation. The immediate workshop objective is to equip evaluators, program managers and community leaders with the tools necessary for undertaking evaluation with a decolonized lens.

Evaluators can do more

There is a disconnect between current notions of metrics and what is considered a decolonized lens for measuring and defining success.  While it is laudable to believe evaluation can lead to change; Indigenous Peoples know that unless you start with community, nothing will really change.  Evaluation needs to do more, and evaluators can do more.  With their expertise and experience, seasoned evaluators are in a position to act more as agents of change, rather than undertaking exercises and measurement which further apply a ‘colonial rule’ over Indigenous Peoples, their lives and their communities.  This workshop is steadfast in strength-based solutions that honour, respect, and embrace Indigenous Knowledge.

The evaluation industry needs evaluators to support change and for evaluation departments to embrace a new way of doing business.  This workshop covers the A to Z and beyond; outlining and detailing this new way of business that supports decolonization and undertakes such direction using steps and stages which can be adopted in part or in-full, to suit your current environments.