Creative Civic Change is powered by stories – and so was the programme evaluation.
Wherever Creative Civic Change folk convene, the gathering quickly assumes the feel of sharing tales around a campfire. Big and small, epic and everyday, joyful and poignant… this is the way that we as evaluators learned what the programme truly meant to those who were involved.
The idea of storytelling as evaluation has underpinned our approach to assessing the impact of Creative Civic Change on communities, artists, arts organisations, and funders. We wanted to challenge the misconception that stories are a lesser, ‘anecdotal’ form of data, as opposed to ‘real’ (quantitative) data.
Valuing and making space for community stories has helped us to more quickly and concretely understand the key impacts of Creative Civic Change – and to support these with meaningful quantitative data.
The Creative Civic Change programme was an experimental programme that put communities in the lead, meaning that evaluation outcomes were not imposed in advance by funders.
These top tips condense our learning from the evaluation of the programme over the last four years.