-
Recent Posts
- Evaluation of marketing – grappling with the important but hard to measure outcomes
- The Friday Funny: A surrealistic mega-analysis of redisorganization theories
- Getting the facts straight on youth unemployment rates
- The Friday Funny: Negotiating the budget
- The Friday Funny: Evaluation and content expertise
Recent Comments
- Michael Scriven on Evaluation of marketing – grappling with the important but hard to measure outcomes
- Kathleen Lynch on The Friday Funny: Negotiating the budget
- Heather Nunns on Friday Funny – 10 ways of knowing you’ve been an evaluator too long
- Tarina MacDonald on 9 golden rules for commissioning a waste-of-money evaluation
- Tarina MacDonald on Valuing cultural expertise – in $$ terms
Archives
Tag Archives: learning
Learning from failure
Being able to learn from failure is an important part of Genuine Evaluation. A recent paper by Cannona and Edmondson explores technical and organizational barriers to doing this. Are there good examples of addressing these in monitoring systems or evaluation plans? Continue reading
Posted in About/Definition, Evaluative questions & answers, The client's role
Tagged failure, learning
Leave a comment
Jane at Real Evaluation
Patricia at CIRCLE (RMIT)