Tag Archive for: independent evaluator

New client: We Invented the Weekend

The Evaluator is delighted to be working with a new client, We Invented the Weekend. You can see more about them on this link. 

We Invented the Weekend is ‘The festival of free time’ and we are looking forward to working together at this high profile and exciting event. The festival is taking place on Saturday 15 & Sunday 16 June and is happening at Media City and Salford Quays. There is an amazing line up including live music, family fun, wellness workshops and sports activities – all for free!

Thousands of people will be making their way there, and we’ll be on hand during the festival with a team of volunteers to understand their experiences. This will include audience profiles, demographic segmentation, economic impact, quality of experience and more. We will be providing a full festival evaluation.

Capturing impact in people’s own words

At The Evaluator we recognise the value of collecting qualitative information for our evaluations. We take pride in capturing the genuine impact our projects or organisations have on individuals through hearing about their experiences in their own words.

The questions we ask are often simple and open to encourage individuals to speak honestly and let their stories unfold naturally. We feel privileged to get to hear about the amazing feedback and stories from people, and we love to share these stories with our clients.

We would also like to share some genuine quotes with you, spoken by real people who have experienced the impact from some of our clients:

We have heard from volunteers

“I truly appreciate everything the team does throughout the year to keep things moving forward. Thank you for helping to make so many people feel empowered, and seeing all of the work being done leaves me feeling so much hope for the future. Thank you for shining a light on all that can be done to make live music more accessible and equitable!” – Volunteer

“That was the biggest opportunity I’ve been given and that changed my life” – Volunteer

“It is such a joy and has made a really positive impact on my life. It has even changed the direction of my career” – Volunteer

 

We have also heard from participants

 

“For my general health I consider [client] more important than the NHS” – Participant of a wellbeing service

“[Client] has just been a godsend for me. Absolute Godsend” – Participant of a wellbeing service

“I really enjoyed the course as I love art and it also gave me a push to get out of the home and socialise more thus contributing to my wellbeing. Thank you”  – Participant of an Arts project

Thank you for the opportunity. Since starting with [project] I’m growing in self confidence and feel like I’m getting my life in order again. I’m putting plans in place and I’m more optimistic for my future.” – Participant of an Arts project

 

If you’re interested in learning more about our evaluation processes or exploring how we can help your organisation measure its impact, don’t hesitate to reach out. We’d love to chat!

Recent Workshop Feedback

In December 2023, The Evaluator worked with Pendle Borough Council to revitalize their Creativity and Cultural Strategy. We pulled together data across various themes and subsequently organised and conducted two workshops. These sessions played a pivotal role in refining existing concepts and co-creating an effective action plan for strategy implementation.

Kerry, representing Pendle Council, had this to say, “It is really wonderful working with Kirsty. Her understanding and approach really worked for our group, and the sessions were focussed but flexible enough to let some great conversations emerge. It has been valuable for everyone involved.”

New Client: Love Withington Baths

The Evaluator is delighted to be working with a new client, Love Withington Baths.

The Evaluator is working with the community leisure centre to carry out a Social Return On Investment (SROI). You can read our blog post all about SROI here, but it’s basically a formal process of identifying what matters to people taking part, starting with the changes they identify. We are looking forward to chatting away to people using the centre, and figuring out what changes it has led to in people’s lives. It’s a really well used centre, so we should get to talk to lots of people!

You can see more about Withington Baths here. 

Recent Client Feedback

At The Evaluator, we are committed to learning and improving our work over time. To make sure we achieve this we do evaluate ourselves and ask our clients to give us feedback. Here are some recent results.

 

And let’s end on a detailed client testimonial, from when The Evaluator worked in partnership with Simon Lees from Countryside Training Partnership to create an evaluation framework.

“Kirsty from The Evaluator and Simon from Countryside Training Partnership have challenged and encouraged the Climate FORTH project team and Board to think about monitoring and evaluation in a holistic way, right from this project development stage. The Monitoring and Evaluation Framework created will support our application to NLHF for delivery phase funding and show how we wish to go beyond monitoring outputs to considering the wider impact of National Lottery and other investment through our project. Communication was excellent throughout this contract and an extension was kindly accommodated when our timelines were delayed. The final report is clear, concise and well considered – spot on – we hope that we get an opportunity to enact it! The Evaluator & Countryside Training Partnership have proposed workable and proportional monitoring and evaluation methods to follow in a project delivery phase, identified suitable baseline data and provided friendly advice as we move through our project development phase. I would be pleased to recommend both parties to other organisations and partnerships looking for a personalised professional approach to this type of work.” Kate Fuller, Climate FORTH Project Manager, Inner Forth Futures.

Inclusion at The Evaluator: Figuring it out for everyone

Accessibility is something that is really important to our organisation. We want to figure things out for people and projects, and part of that is figuring out how to do that for the widest range of people possible!

We are a disability led organisation which is one reason we are passionate about being inclusive. We try hard to follow the social model of disability where we understand that we need to adapt the world around a person’s disabilities and access needs rather than expect them to adapt. We recognise that disability is more than wheelchair access, it’s a wide range of adaptations, many of which are easy and free. We try and include as wide a range of access needs as we can think of in each project and are always willing to adapt to make sure our processes and materials suit the client and participant needs.

We are still learning and imagine we will be for all time, we know we don’t have all the answers but here are some of the ways we try to be more inclusive, all of which are actions we have carried out.

  • When we run 1:1 interviews we can offer to send questions in advance, plan in comfort breaks and run these at times that suit people – including evenings and weekends
  • We can use large font sizes on emails or text clients or schedule regular zoom calls
  • We use easy to read fonts on our surveys and our infographics and use contrasting colours in graphs as much as possible
  • We are happy to communicate however people prefer – whether that is by email, by text, by zoom, by phone call – or even mixed methods, for example mixing text and video call by using zoom captioning
  • We can run sessions when people have supporters or interpreters available and make our timetable flexible
  • We provide large print versions of our final reports and executive summaries on request
  • We have worked hard to ensure all our visuals are compatible with screen readers, use alt-text as much as possible and break reports into sections using headings and subheadings for clarity
  • We can provide surveys in alternative ways – for example using Google Forms or as paper copies
  • We worked with a client to use sign language videos on our surveys to make sure people understand the questions asked and adapted our questions to suit British Sign Language (BSL) rather than expecting BSL to adapt to our questions
  • We offer adaptations to our interview processes when hiring and offer flexible working conditions and hours

We have three current and recent clients who have taught us a lot about being more accessible.

  1. Attitude is everything

Attitude is everything have been passionate about including people with disabilities for a long time now. They have a few cultural approaches which we love and which we have tried to follow. Their overarching tag line is ‘nothing for us, without us’ and therefore we have learned to test materials and not make assumptions without asking. It helps us keep flexible. The other way AisE work is to help people make changes from where they are now, not to criticise what they have or haven’t done. Again, that’s something we use now with all our clients, and try to embody ourselves – helping them to make positive progress from wherever they currently are, using data driven decisions of course.

We particularly love their ‘how we think about disability’ approach, which you can read here. 

  1. Deaf Rave

Troi Lee from Deaf Rave was a great client to work with, and we adapted our communication styles, using zoom on mornings when a sign-language interpreter was available. We learned about the Deaf Culture, and attended an event in person to communicate with sign language interpreters therefore adapting our style. Troi described working with Kirsty Rose Parker from The Evaluator as “if you need a evaluator report done.  She the one!  I have not seen any better report than anyone else has done.”

Troi is a passionate advocate for Deaf music and regularly works with the BBC, most recently taking part in the BBC music introducing festival to put on London x Deaf Rave. You can see more about that festival here.

  1. VocalEyes

VocalEyes are a charity who work with people with many different disabilities including visual impairments and people who use screen readers. This has meant making a number of changes to our project evaluation including software changes, allowing for access needs such as emailing questions and using zoom captioning. This has allowed us to learn more about inclusion and practical methods to adapt our styles.

To provide an evaluation report which can be understood by the widest possible range of people, we are currently learning how to make the best accessible report we can and are working on developing spoken video versions of our executive summaries in final reports. Please do ask us if you would want a version of this!

VocalEyes have just produced ten ways to attract deaf, disabled and neurodivergent visitors to heritage sites which is well worth a read. Click here to look at those ten tips.