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June 1995 Volume 33 Number 3 |
A Gauge of Success in Public Issues Education
James S. Long
Jo Mark As citizens contribute to public decisions, they may cycle through a sequence of steps or "issue cycle." We often wonder how much Extension education programs help citizens proceed through this issue cycle. To answer this question, we adapted and tested an assessment technique. An introduction to the technique and how it worked in a field trial are presented. The Technique First, we developed a clock-like gauge of the issue cycle:
1 Becoming concerned
Evaluating 8 2 Talking with others
Taking action 7 3 Defining the issue
(like voting)
Making a choice 6 4 Searching for
alternatives
5 Anticipating consequences
of alternatives
Second, we placed the gauge, with instructions to participants, on a single sheet, front and back, for a community issues forum that, in one evening, considered three policy questions on the ballot for an upcoming election. Third, at the start of the community forum, we asked participants to read the instructions and indicate where they were in the issue cycle for each ballot issue and, then, to hold the sheet until the end of the forum. Finally, at the conclusion of the evening's program, we asked participants to turn over the sheet and again indicate where they were in each of the three issue cycles. What We Found From the 27 to 29 responses for which we received both a pre- and a post-assessment, we discovered that:
In conclusion, the clock-like gauge:
In short, the gauge rendered data useful in estimating the contribution of an educational program in helping participants progress through the issue cycle across quite different kinds of public issues. Recommendations
We believe this "gauge" merits further consideration as a tool to help evaluate Extension's contributions to public issues education. We'd welcome your thoughts and experiences.
This article is online at http://www.joe.org/joe/1995june/tt2.html.
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