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Thursday, September 19
 

10:30am AEST

Evaluating capacity building for sustainability scientists: Pathways for early career researchers
Thursday September 19, 2024 10:30am - 11:00am AEST
104
Title: Evaluating sustainability science capacity building: Pathways for early career researchers

Author/s: Lisa Walker (CSIRO)

In the quest for sustainable solutions to pressing global challenges, transdisciplinary approaches, that integrate insights and methods from various fields, are increasingly being recognised as key to driving change. This presentation will share insights from an evaluation of a five-year, $18 million sustainability science research program seeking to not only drive innovation but to also empower the next cohort of early career researchers (ECRs) to coordinate action across research, policy and practice to address complex sustainability problems.
Our formative, mixed-methods evaluation highlighted on-the-job learning, face-to-face engagement and networking as pivotal in building sustainability science capacity. We also found targeted recruitment, research team engagement and the provision of support and resources to supervisors as essential, and sometimes overlooked, components. This work contributes to the broader discussion on how evaluation can enhance the development of sustainability science, proposing a framework that emphasises the individual, team and institutional support mechanisms necessary for effective ECR capacity building.
Novelty in our approach lies in the integration of evaluative practices within the capacity-building process, offering a reflective lens on how transdisciplinary endeavours can be optimised to address sustainability challenges. This is particularly relevant for evaluators wanting to build their own skills, or those of others, to engage on complex sustainability issues. The study also underscores the significance of adaptive learning and evaluation in navigating the complexities of sustainability science, inviting a broader conversation on how evaluation can be leveraged to facilitate meaningful contributions to societal and planetary well-being.
Chair
avatar for Su-Ann Drew

Su-Ann Drew

Manager, Grosvenor
Su-Ann is a Manager specialising in program evaluation within Grosvenor’s public sector advisory practice. Su-Ann has more than a decade of rich and diverse professional experience, which enables her to offer a unique perspective and critical lens to solving complex problems for... Read More →
Speakers
avatar for Lisa Walker

Lisa Walker

CSIRO
I am a social scientist with a background in program monitoring, evaluation and sustainable development. I am currently working with  CSIRO's Valuing Sustainability Future Science Platform (VS FSP) and manage the Monitoring, Evaluation, Learning and Research project within the VS... Read More →
Thursday September 19, 2024 10:30am - 11:00am AEST
104 113 Convention Centre Pl, South Wharf VIC 3006, Australia

11:00am AEST

Learn, evolve, adapt: Evaluation of climate change and disaster risk reduction programs
Thursday September 19, 2024 11:00am - 11:30am AEST
104
Authors: Justine Smith (Nation Partners )

There is a pressing need to reduce the risks associated with climate change and the disasters that are likely to increase as a result. Along with the need to take action, comes the need to show we are making a difference - or perhaps more importantly the need to learn and evolve to ensure we are making a difference. However when operating in an ever changing, uncertain environment, with layers of complexity and outcomes that may not be realised for some time, or until disaster strikes, evidence of impact is not always easy to collect nor a priority.

Drawing on experience developing evaluation frameworks and delivering evaluation projects in the areas of climate change and disaster and emergency management, I will present some of the challenges and opportunities I have observed. In doing so, I propose that there is no 'one way' to do things. Rather, taking the time to understand what we are evaluating and to continually learn, evolve and adjust how we evaluate is key. This includes having clarity on what we really mean when we are talking about reducing risk and increasing resilience. Ideas I will explore include:
  • The concepts of risk reduction and resilience.
  • The difference between evaluation for accountability and for genuine learning and improvement.
  • Balancing an understanding of and progress towards big picture outcomes with project level, time and funding bound outcomes.
  • The challenge and potential benefits of event-based evaluation to learn and improve.

Evaluation has the capacity to contribute positively to action taken to reduce climate change risks and improve our management of disasters and recovery from disasters. As evaluators we too need to be innovative and open-minded in our approaches, to learn from and with those working directly in this space for the benefit of all.
Chair
avatar for Su-Ann Drew

Su-Ann Drew

Manager, Grosvenor
Su-Ann is a Manager specialising in program evaluation within Grosvenor’s public sector advisory practice. Su-Ann has more than a decade of rich and diverse professional experience, which enables her to offer a unique perspective and critical lens to solving complex problems for... Read More →
Speakers
avatar for Justine Smith

Justine Smith

Principal, Nation Partners
With a background spanning research, government, non-government organisations and consulting, Justine brings technical knowledge and over 10 years of experience to the projects she works on. As a highly experienced program evaluator and strategic thinker, Justine has applied her skills... Read More →
Thursday September 19, 2024 11:00am - 11:30am AEST
104 113 Convention Centre Pl, South Wharf VIC 3006, Australia

11:30am AEST

Bringing the "human" into measurement: From in-depth inquiry to systemic change
Thursday September 19, 2024 11:30am - 12:00pm AEST
104
Authors: Julia Suh (Tobias)

Humans are complex and diverse. To create social change, what do we need to understand about them?

Their behaviours and mindsets are key, but the broader context and systems they operate within paints a fuller picture of the multiple moving parts that need to change simultaneously for sustained impact. These changes can be mapped, with embedded evaluative thinking, building a pathway for formal evaluation.

In this session, experts in Human-Centred Design and social change share their innovative approaches to thinking beyond the project- or program-level goals or organisational level performance indicators. Examples are drawn from direct experiences working across various transformation projects, from reducing child sexual exploitation and preventing academic misconduct to improving the care economy and elevating patient outcomes. They demonstrate how program goals and social change vision can not only be realised together, but also how a combination of strategic prioritisation, collaboration capability building and network can accelerate the process.
Chair
avatar for Su-Ann Drew

Su-Ann Drew

Manager, Grosvenor
Su-Ann is a Manager specialising in program evaluation within Grosvenor’s public sector advisory practice. Su-Ann has more than a decade of rich and diverse professional experience, which enables her to offer a unique perspective and critical lens to solving complex problems for... Read More →
Speakers
avatar for Julia Suh

Julia Suh

Principal, Tobias
avatar for JESSICA LEEFE

JESSICA LEEFE

Principal, Tobias
Thursday September 19, 2024 11:30am - 12:00pm AEST
104 113 Convention Centre Pl, South Wharf VIC 3006, Australia

12:00pm AEST

Systems evaluation to the rescue!: How do we use systems evaluation to improve societal and planetary wellbeing?
Thursday September 19, 2024 12:00pm - 12:30pm AEST
104
Authors: Kristy Hornby (Grosvenor), Tenille Moselen (First Person Consulting)

Systems evaluation - many might have heard the term, but few have done one. This session shares two case studies of different systems evaluations and the learnings from these to benefit other evaluators who are conducting or about to begin a systems evaluation.

The session will open with an overview and explanation of what systems evaluation is, in terms of its key features and how it is distinguished from other forms of evaluation. The presenters will then talk through their case studies, one of which centres on the disability justice system in the ACT, while the other takes a sector-wide focus across the whole of Victoria. The co-presenters will share openly and honestly their initial plans for commencing the systems evaluations, how they had to amend those plans in response to real-world conditions, and the tips and tricks and innovations they picked up along the way.
Chair
avatar for Su-Ann Drew

Su-Ann Drew

Manager, Grosvenor
Su-Ann is a Manager specialising in program evaluation within Grosvenor’s public sector advisory practice. Su-Ann has more than a decade of rich and diverse professional experience, which enables her to offer a unique perspective and critical lens to solving complex problems for... Read More →
Speakers
avatar for Kristy Hornby

Kristy Hornby

Associate Director, Victorian Evaluation Lead, Grosvenor
Kristy has over ten years of evaluation experience, with expertise spanning the Victorian state government, federal government, local government and not-for-profit sectors. She has particular expertise in social services, employment, primary health, agriculture and environment and... Read More →
avatar for Tenille Moselen

Tenille Moselen

First Person Consulting
https://www.fpconsulting.com.au/our-team.htmlTenille has qualifications in public health, with experience in mental health and wellbeing, alcohol and drug and international development. Her passion is creating change through design and bringing stakeholders together to address complex... Read More →
Thursday September 19, 2024 12:00pm - 12:30pm AEST
104 113 Convention Centre Pl, South Wharf VIC 3006, Australia

2:30pm AEST

Monitoring and Evaluation Journeys: Making footprints, community-based enterprise in Australian First Nations contexts
Thursday September 19, 2024 2:30pm - 3:00pm AEST
104
Authors: Donna-Maree Stephens (Community First Development ),Sharon Babyack (Community First Development, AU)

As First Nations' economies grow and develop, wayfinding of monitoring and evaluation frameworks that meaningfully address the holistic outcomes of First Nations' economic independence are a necessity. Culturally responsive monitoring and evaluation frameworks provide footprints for distinct ways of thinking about the holistic and significant contribution that First Nations' economies make to their communities and the broad Australian economic landscape.
Presenting findings from an organisation with more than 20 years of experience working alongside First Nations' communities and businesses grounded in collective and community focused outcomes, this presentation will highlight key learnings of monitoring and evaluation from First Nations' enterprises. It is an invitation to explore and rethink notions of success by drawing on experiences and Dreams (long-term goals) for community organisations, businesses and journeys towards positive outcomes alongside the role of one culturally responsive monitoring and evaluation approach. Our presentation will provide an overview of our work in the community economic development space and key learnings developed through our monitoring and evaluation yarns with First Nations' enterprises across a national First Nations' economic landscape that includes urban, regional and remote illustrations.
Chair
avatar for Kathleen Stacey

Kathleen Stacey

Managing Director, beyond…(Kathleen Stacey & Associates)
Kathleen Stacey is the Managing Director and Principal Consultant at beyond... She spent her formative working years within the public sector and academia, before establishing and expanding beyond... into its current form. The company conducts consultancy, evaluation, research and... Read More →
Speakers
avatar for Sharon Babyack

Sharon Babyack

General Manager Impact & Strategy, Community First Development
My role at Community First Development involves oversight of research, evaluation, communications and effectiveness of the Community Development program. During my time with the organisation I have led teams to deliver major change processes and strategic priorities, have had carriage... Read More →
Thursday September 19, 2024 2:30pm - 3:00pm AEST
104 113 Convention Centre Pl, South Wharf VIC 3006, Australia

3:30pm AEST

Constructing a Wisdom Base: A Hands-On Exploration of First Nations Knowledge Systems
Thursday September 19, 2024 3:30pm - 4:30pm AEST
106
Authors: Skye Trudgett (Kowa ),Haley Ferguson (Kowa, AU),Tara Beattie (Kowa, AU),Levi McKenzie-Kirkbright (Kowa, AU),Jess Dart (Clear Horizon, AU)

In the pursuit of understanding and honouring the depth of First Nations wisdom, this hands-on session at the AES conference introduces the Ancestral Knowledge Tapestry —a living guide for developing a repository of ancestral knowledge, practices, and philosophies. Participants will actively engage in co-creating a 'Wisdom Base,' a collective endeavour to encapsulate the richness of old and new First Nations knowledges and their application to contemporary evaluative practices.

Through interactive exercises, collaborative dialogue, and reflective practices, attendees will delve into the components of the Ancestral Knowledge Tapestry, exploring the symbiosis between deep knowing, artefacts, deep listening and truth-telling. The session aims to empower participants, particularly those from First Nations communities, to identify, document, and share their unique wisdom in ways that foster self-determination and cultural continuity.
Attendees will emerge from this workshop not only with a deeper appreciation for the intrinsic value of First Nations knowledge systems but also with practical insights into how to cultivate a Wisdom Base that not only preserves but actively revitalises First Nations wisdom for future generations.

Chair
avatar for Sandra Ayoo

Sandra Ayoo

Assistant Professor, University of North Carolina Greensboro
Dr. Ayoo is an Assistant Professor of Educational Research Methodology in the Department of Information, Library, and Research Science at the School of Education, University of North Carolina Greensboro. She teaches graduate courses in program evaluation and research methodology... Read More →
Speakers
avatar for Skye Trudgett

Skye Trudgett

CEO, Kowa
Skye is a Gamilaroi researcher who has contributed to numerous evaluations and research projects including place-based, systems change and government initiatives. Skye has a particular interest in Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance and seeks to support the practical application... Read More →
avatar for Levi McKenzie-Kirkbright

Levi McKenzie-Kirkbright

Software Engineer, Kowa Collaboration
Software engineer at Kowa investigating how to implement Indigenous data sovereignty principles into software systems.
avatar for Tara Beattie

Tara Beattie

Consultant, Kowa Collaboration
Tara Beattie is a dedicated professional who is passionate about fostering positive change in Community.  As a Consultant at Kowa Collaboration, Tara leads projects designed to empower organisations in First Nations UMEL practices, aligning with Kowa's commitment to amplifying First... Read More →
avatar for Jess Dart

Jess Dart

Chief Evaluator and Founder, Clear Horizon Consulting
Dr Jess Dart is the founder and Chief Evaluator of Clear Horizon, an Australian-based specialist evaluation company. Having received the 2018 Outstanding Contribution to Evaluation Award from the Australian Evaluation Society (AES), Jess is a recognised leader with over 25 years of... Read More →
Thursday September 19, 2024 3:30pm - 4:30pm AEST
106 102 Convention Centre Pl, South Wharf VIC 3006, Australia
 
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