Exploring How Organizational Actors Experience Evaluation and Its Influence: A Q-Methodological Study
Author(s)
Kelly, Catherine
Downloadkelly-2025-exploring-how-organizational-actors-experience-evaluation-and-its-influence-a-q-methodological-study.pdf (1.137Mb)
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This article contributes to research on evaluation by examining how organizational actors respond to and use evaluation imposed on them within an evaluation system. Drawing on Henry and Mark's theory of evaluation influence, this study uses Q-methodology to explore how staff within English higher education providers experience evaluation and its influence on their widening participation practice and strategy decision-making. The experiences of organizational actors are examined and classified into four types: strategic practitioners, pragmatic practitioners, staff with indirect involvement in widening participation, and evaluation enthusiasts. Through analyzing these experiences, the findings illustrate the diverse ways organizational actors are influenced by evaluation within evaluation systems. To deepen our understanding of evaluation influence in the contexts of evaluation systems, this article recommends explicitly embedding organizational theories into future theories of evaluation influence and provides suggestions for future research on the topic.
Date issued
2025-04-23Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sociotechnical Systems Research CenterJournal
American Journal of Evaluation
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Citation
Kelly, C. (2025). Exploring How Organizational Actors Experience Evaluation and Its Influence: A Q-Methodological Study. American Journal of Evaluation, 46(4), 535-558.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1098-2140
1557-0878