This all-in-one text assists human service practitioners, and the students of human service educational programs, in the evaluation of their practice with their clients. It takes readers through the entire research process, step by step, starting with the literature review on the nature of the behavior being served, to the development of their study methods, to the statistical analysis of data using the internet and, finally, to the drawing of conclusions based on the outcome study that was conducted. When readers complete this book, they will be prepared to conduct an outcome evaluation study and to present a report to their agencies or instructors.
Key distinctions of this text include:
guides for analysis of data using Excel, the internet or SPSS for statistical analysis of data;
the separation of content into basic concepts and intermediate concepts for use in beginning and intermediate courses in human service research methods;
an instructor's manual that offers outlines, lists, and test questions additional to those in the text;
a student workbook with practice assignments for use in courses as well as a set of checklists that serve as a guide for various tasks in the research process; and
objectives, summaries, and tests in all chapters.
Evaluating Human Service Outcomes could be used as the basic text for a beginning course in human service research in educational programs in social work, counseling, and psychology where a major goal is to complete a research study. It could also be used as a supplemental text for advanced research courses that include the analysis of data. The text also should be of interest to human service practitioners who are working in programs funded by grants that require outcome evaluation.
Über den Autor Reginald O. York
Reginald O. York, PhD, is Professor Emeritus, School of Social Work, University of North Carolina Wilmington. He has taught at three different universities and is the author of six books, one on human service planning, one on statistics for human service evaluation, and four on research methods for human services. He is the author of more than 30 journal articles on such themes as leadership, organizational decision making, and women in management. He is especially interested in evidence-based practice and the idea of learning by doing.