Chapter 11 Evaluation
11.0.0.0.1 Each ATE project is required to have an evaluation component to assess its quality and effectiveness. Evaluation of ATE and other NSF-funded projects is intended to serve two distinct purposes: (1) Produce information that can be used to improve a project as it is being implemented and (2) Determine and document a project’s achievements (Frechtling, 2010).
11.0.0.0.2 ATE PIs were asked about their evaluators and interactions with them, as well as their projects’ use and dissemination of evaluation results.
11.1 Evaluation
11.1.0.1 Ninety-three percent of ATE projects engaged an evaluator.
Of the 271 projects with evaluators, 93% reported having an external evaluator, five percent had both an internal and external evaluator, and two percent had only an internal evaluator.
48% of PIs reported that they interacted with their evaluators occasionally (more often than quarterly). Thirty percent interacted with their evaluators continually (at least once a week) or often (two or three times a month), and 22% did so infrequently or rarely (once a quarter or less).
11.1.0.1.1 More than half of ATE projects received both oral and written evaluation reports.
Figure 11.1: Types of evaluation report received by ATE projects (n=271)
Of the 234 PIs who received evaluation reports, 57% indicated their project’s evaluation caused them to make a change in implementing their project, and 42% indicated that the evaluation caused them to make a change in their project’s goals, objectives, or target audience.