SALLY FORT

  • Home
  • About
  • Projects
    • Right now...
      • Visual Arts
        • Creative Industries
          • Heritage
            • Education
            • Skills
              • Project Management
                • Evaluation
                  • Professional Development
                    • Research
                    • Clients
                    • Blog
                    • Contact
                     
                    Illustrating evaluation 07/05/2010
                    0 Comments
                     
                    World image of early years foundation stage six areas of learning
                    In evaluation, looking at outcomes is vital. When you've invested in a project of course you'll need to know what was achieved and where there are still gaps. But it can be cumbersome reading mounds and mounds of text in a report. Charts, graphs and percentages can help clarify, but can still make for dull reading (and for some feel too much like maths homework).

                    To help busy partners to any project, finding a variety of ways to report on activity can make all the difference between people remembering what went well and being able to advocate the value of their work... or not.

                    I've recently been creating a toolkit for early years practitioners looking at how creative engagement can help achieve new and unexpected results. Its aim is to be quickly digestible and highly practical. The toolkit is based on the activity of ten creative early years projects in schools and Children's  Centres in the North of England.

                    The projects were mapped against the Early Years Foundation Stage six areas of learning. To illustrate which of the EYFS outcomes the projects really brought to life, I used wordle to create this at a glance illustration. The larger the word, the more presence it had in the projects. You can see here Personal, Social and Emotional development was the strongest feature across the programme overall.

                    It doesn't replace the need for writing other information in the report of course. However the teachers, children's centre staff and creative practitioners involved, and readers of the toolkit, can now instantly see where the projects thrived and what kinds of outcomes similar work might expect to achieve, so much more quickly and easily than deciphering a big chunk of writing or trying to analyse a graph.
                     


                    Comments




                    Leave a Reply

                      ...Blog

                      I'm most interested in how the public, your public, whoever that may be, engages with culture and creativity. 

                      If there's a design angle (be it contemporary design, textiles, built environment, engineering, social history, visitor flow, use of space and architecture etc) then I'm even more interested. 

                      And if it nurtures creativity and develops personal, social or professional skills  I'm absolutely all ears.

                      To subscribe by email, enter your email address:

                      View my profile on LinkedIn

                      RSS Feed

                      link to mini blog

                      Categories

                      All
                      Art
                      Arts
                      Artsmark
                      Citizenship
                      Communities
                      Conferences
                      Consultation
                      Craft
                      Creative Industries
                      Creativity
                      Culture
                      Digital
                      Early Years
                      Education
                      Evaluation
                      Events
                      Freelancing
                      Funding
                      Galleries
                      Heritage
                      Interpretation
                      Learning
                      Museums
                      Opportunities
                      Outdoors
                      Partnership
                      Play
                      Presentations
                      Public Engagement
                      Reports
                      Research
                      Resources
                      Training
                      Videos
                      Writing
                      Young People

                      Archives

                      September 2011
                      May 2011
                      April 2011
                      March 2011
                      November 2010
                      October 2010
                      September 2010
                      August 2010
                      July 2010
                      June 2010
                      May 2010
                      April 2010
                      March 2010
                      February 2010
                      January 2010
                      December 2009
                      November 2009
                      October 2009
                      September 2009
                      April 2009

                       

                      Link to Sally

                      Links :: sites I like

                      Mary Mary Quite Contrary

                      The Participatory Museum

                      Teacher Tom

                      Picture

                      Post Craft :: click image for details