|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
We are living in a cyber society. Mobile devices, social media, the
Internet, crime cameras, and other diverse sources can be pulled
together to form massive datasets, known as big data, which make it
possible to learn things we could not begin to comprehend
otherwise. While private companies are using this macroscopic tool,
policy-makers and evaluators have been slower to adopt big data to
make and evaluate public policy. Cyber Society, Big Data, and
Evaluation shows ways big data is now being used in policy
evaluation and discusses how it will transform the role of
evaluators in the future. Arguing that big data will play a
permanent and growing role in policy evaluation, especially since
results may be delivered almost in real time, the contributors
declare that the evaluation community must rise to the challenge or
risk being marginalized. This volume suggests that evaluators must
redefine their tools in relation to big data, obtain competencies
necessary to work with it, and collaborate with professionals
already experienced in using big data. By adding evaluators'
expertise, for example, in theory- driven evaluation, using
repositories, making value judgements, and applying findings,
policy-makers and evaluators can come to make better-informed
decisions and policies.
We are living in a cyber society. Mobile devices, social media, the
Internet, crime cameras, and other diverse sources can be pulled
together to form massive datasets, known as big data, which make it
possible to learn things we could not begin to comprehend
otherwise. While private companies are using this macroscopic tool,
policy-makers and evaluators have been slower to adopt big data to
make and evaluate public policy. Cyber Society, Big Data, and
Evaluation shows ways big data is now being used in policy
evaluation and discusses how it will transform the role of
evaluators in the future. Arguing that big data will play a
permanent and growing role in policy evaluation, especially since
results may be delivered almost in real time, the contributors
declare that the evaluation community must rise to the challenge or
risk being marginalized. This volume suggests that evaluators must
redefine their tools in relation to big data, obtain competencies
necessary to work with it, and collaborate with professionals
already experienced in using big data. By adding evaluators'
expertise, for example, in theory- driven evaluation, using
repositories, making value judgements, and applying findings,
policy-makers and evaluators can come to make better-informed
decisions and policies.
|
You may like...
Holy Fvck
Demi Lovato
CD
R435
Discovery Miles 4 350
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|