Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to Action

In Brief: How do we measure the impact of our outreach programming? While there is a lot of information about successful outreach activities in the library literature, there is far less documentation of assessment strategies. There may be numerous barriers to conducting assessment, including a lack...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shannon L. Farrell, Kristen Mastel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: In the Library with the Lead Pipe 2016-05-01
Series:In the Library with the Lead Pipe
Subjects:
Online Access:http:///2016/considering-outreach-assessment-strategies-sample-scenarios-and-a-call-to-action/
id doaj-ba8b385d51ae4857a3379e02e274fe21
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ba8b385d51ae4857a3379e02e274fe212020-11-25T00:10:54ZengIn the Library with the Lead PipeIn the Library with the Lead Pipe1944-61952016-05-017463Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to ActionShannon L. FarrellKristen MastelIn Brief: How do we measure the impact of our outreach programming? While there is a lot of information about successful outreach activities in the library literature, there is far less documentation of assessment strategies. There may be numerous barriers to conducting assessment, including a lack of time, money, staff, knowledge, and administrative support. Further, many outreach activities are not tied back to institutional missions and event goals, meaning they are disjointed activities that do not reflect particular outcomes. High attendance numbers may show that there was excellent swag and food at an event, but did the event relate back to your missions and goals? In this article, we examine the various kinds of outreach that libraries are doing, sort these activities into six broad categories, explore assorted assessment techniques, and include a small survey about people’s experience and comfort with suggested assessments. Using hypothetical outreach scenarios, we will illustrate how to identify appropriate assessment strategies to evaluate an event’s goals and measure impact. Recognizing there are numerous constraints, we suggest that all library workers engaging in outreach activities should strongly consider incorporating goals-driven assessment in their work./2016/considering-outreach-assessment-strategies-sample-scenarios-and-a-call-to-action/assessmentevaluationgoalsmissionsoutreachpublic services
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon L. Farrell
Kristen Mastel
spellingShingle Shannon L. Farrell
Kristen Mastel
Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to Action
In the Library with the Lead Pipe
assessment
evaluation
goals
missions
outreach
public services
author_facet Shannon L. Farrell
Kristen Mastel
author_sort Shannon L. Farrell
title Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to Action
title_short Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to Action
title_full Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to Action
title_fullStr Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to Action
title_full_unstemmed Considering Outreach Assessment: Strategies, Sample Scenarios, and a Call to Action
title_sort considering outreach assessment: strategies, sample scenarios, and a call to action
publisher In the Library with the Lead Pipe
series In the Library with the Lead Pipe
issn 1944-6195
publishDate 2016-05-01
description In Brief: How do we measure the impact of our outreach programming? While there is a lot of information about successful outreach activities in the library literature, there is far less documentation of assessment strategies. There may be numerous barriers to conducting assessment, including a lack of time, money, staff, knowledge, and administrative support. Further, many outreach activities are not tied back to institutional missions and event goals, meaning they are disjointed activities that do not reflect particular outcomes. High attendance numbers may show that there was excellent swag and food at an event, but did the event relate back to your missions and goals? In this article, we examine the various kinds of outreach that libraries are doing, sort these activities into six broad categories, explore assorted assessment techniques, and include a small survey about people’s experience and comfort with suggested assessments. Using hypothetical outreach scenarios, we will illustrate how to identify appropriate assessment strategies to evaluate an event’s goals and measure impact. Recognizing there are numerous constraints, we suggest that all library workers engaging in outreach activities should strongly consider incorporating goals-driven assessment in their work.
topic assessment
evaluation
goals
missions
outreach
public services
url http:///2016/considering-outreach-assessment-strategies-sample-scenarios-and-a-call-to-action/
work_keys_str_mv AT shannonlfarrell consideringoutreachassessmentstrategiessamplescenariosandacalltoaction
AT kristenmastel consideringoutreachassessmentstrategiessamplescenariosandacalltoaction
_version_ 1725406366028267520