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Module C > Outcomes
Outcomes
Defining Outcomes
An outcome is a change in a target audience’s skills, attitudes, knowledge, behaviors, status, or life condition brought about by experiencing a program.
"Skills" : Student Bird Watchers can identify local birds by sight and name.
"Attitudes" : Student Bird Watchers no longer think science is boring.
"Knowledge" : Student Bird Watchers know what local birds eat and what predators they face.
"Behavior" : Children read for pleasure over three hours per week.
"Status" : At-risk students using educational materials on library computers earn a General Education Diploma and improve salary and job prospects.
"Life Conditions" : West Dakota residents stop smoking after using improved access to reliable, understandable medical information.
Outcomes develop over time. Note that
- short-term outcomes are likely to be changes in skills, attitudes and knowledge
- medium-term often include changes in behavior and decision making
- long-term outcomes may involve changes in status or life conditions
Most projects only have the resources and time frame to measure short-term and medium-term outcomes.
Short-term, medium-term, and long-term outcomes
The purpose statement in Module B (Do what? For whom? For what outcomes/benefits?) may lend itself to stating big, long-term goals that are hard to measure. The strongest logical planning models focus on achievable, measurable short-term outcomes. If you have long-term goals, be clear about how the particular program leads to those outcomes.
Let’s look at a simple example:
Teaching Student Bird Watchers about local birds involves library books, museum visits, and field trips with the long-term goal of interesting them in their local environment.
Which of the following outcomes are short-, medium- or long-term outcomes?
Student Bird Watchers recognize local birds from museum models and book illustrations.
Student Bird Watcher majors in Biology in college.
Student Bird Watchers no longer consider bird-watching activities 'dumb.
Student Bird Watchers can identify local birds on a field trip.
A Student Bird Watcher volunteers with other family members at a local bird sanctuary.
Answer
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