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In this webinar, Alissa Marchant and Shelli Golson-Mickens of Innovation Network discussed what it takes to communicate evaluation findings equitably.
They shared overarching principles for communicating equitably from their "Equitable Communications Guide" with concrete strategies for applying these principles to your work.
Evaluators hold substantive power in disseminating and influencing high-level decision-making. To ensure that evaluative findings support community needs, reduce harm, and reflect the diversity of those communities, evaluators must be skilled at communicating equitably. This requires careful consideration of how written words and visual presentations of data are received by readers, users, and audiences.