In late 2021, the White House issued new guidance to federal agencies calling for the consideration of indigenous knowledge in federal policymaking. The statement, endorsed and embraced by the American Evaluation Association, is long considered part of evaluation practice as part of a broader effort to engage cultural competence.
On April 14th at 2:00 p.m. ET, the Data Foundation hosted its first 2022 installment of the “Issues in Evaluation” virtual discussion series. Co-sponsored by the Government Accountability Office and Data Foundation, participants and experts engaged in a dialogue about what cultural competence means in reality for federal agencies executing evaluation policies and practices in 2022 and beyond.
Importantly, participants reacted to the emerging notion of multicultural validity and its role for evaluation practice alongside other forms of validity such as internal, external, and statistical conclusion. Rather than speculating, the speakers offered real-world applications, ideas, and approaches for applying multicultural validity in practice that are relevant to federal evaluation practice and policy.
Speakers
Nicky Bowman, Ph.D., President, Bowman Performance Consulting; Evaluator and Researcher at the University of Wisconsin Madison
Valerie Caracelli, Ph.D., Senior Social Science Analyst, United States Government Accountability Office
Jenny Chanley, Ph. D., Senior Analyst, United States Government Accountability Office
Giovanni Dazzo, Ph.D., Senior Advisor, Applied Learning & Evaluation, U.S. Department of State
Karen Kirkhart, M.S.W., Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Falk College School of Social Work
Terell Lasane, Ph.D., Assistant Director, Center for Evaluation Methods and Issues (CEMI), United States Government Accountability Office
Kathryn Newcomer, Ph.D., Professor, The Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration