Authors
Mike Coldwell, Bronwen Maxwell
Publication date
2018/10
Source
Review of Education
Volume
6
Issue
3
Pages
267-300
Description
Designs combining different types of data are increasingly used in educational evaluation, to provide both evidence of impact and an explanation of the processes by which impacts are created. Logic models are visual representations of how an intervention leads via a set of steps from resources and inputs to outputs and then sets of outcomes. Their use has become widespread to underpin evaluations; and they have become of more interest in education as they have been promoted by policy makers and funders including the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) in England. This paper addresses the question: how can logic models be used to frame and implement educational evaluations using combinations of methods? To do so, the paper draws on theory‐based evaluation literature to identify a set of issues to be considered: the role of implementation logic; causal mechanisms; the context of interventions …
Total citations
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