CYC 804 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Program Evaluation, Repeated Measures Design, Moxley

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Case evaluation involves the collection of information about whether the client accomplished goals and whether service actions were successful by contributing to the accomplishment of goals. Based on the collection of information, additional decisions and plans are formulated. Evaluation is important to determine if clients meet their goals, and contributes to the decision making and planning for services that help them to meet the goals. Only by systematically collecting information about the case as it unfolds can the practitioner know whether it is going as planned. Over-all, evaluation involves collection of information on if clients accomplished their goals, if service actions contributed to this, and the formulation of additional plans. Pre-measures (inputs): collected prior to service or at the beginning, includes test information (assessment for suicide risk, cafas, etc) and unstructured family-child needs/goals/outcome statements. Interim measures: collected during service delivery, can include child"s progress reviews/reports, considers practitioner processes and activities, child"s processes and activities, repeated measures, and standardized testing.

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