"Evaluative criteria" refers to the specific factors or standards used to make judgments or assessments about something. It means having a set of guidelines or measures that are used to determine the value, quality, or success of a particular thing, such as a product, service, or performance.
Full definition
Each watch list profile represents a set
of evaluative criteria designed to capture a particular perspective or set of concerns.
To be taken seriously by other mental health disciplines as well as by insurance companies and governmental structures, pastoral psychotherapy must develop its
own evaluative criteria.
Evaluative criteria clearly are essential for summative evaluations, but teachers also are recognizing their role in improving performance.
A second assessment practice that supports learning involves
presenting evaluative criteria and models of work that illustrate different levels of quality.
The key to initiating a review process linked to compensation is persuading your partners to place their confidence in two things:
the evaluative criteria, and the arbiter of the evaluations.
His argument seems to be directed against a certain kind of historical «paleoconservative» who sees a Golden Age in the social institutions or social spirit of some past time; yet his refutation of such a perspective invokes progress in dentistry, rhetorically shifting
the evaluative criteria from sociology to technology.
A system is more than just
your evaluative criteria and level of performance.
Second, evaluation could encourage teachers to be generally more self - reflective, regardless of
the evaluative criteria.
Ensure the learners are aware of performance requirements and
evaluative criteria.
Keep
the evaluative criteria for each level authentic to the learner's experience.
During this step, it is essential that we keep referring back to
the evaluative criteria while we are selecting sources of evidence.
The irreconcilability of art and theatre was the mainstay of Fried's thought until, rebounding into the 19th century (thinking about the work of such artists as Courbet and Thomas Eakins) and as though searching for a way out of what looked like an increasingly inhibiting formalism, Fried expanded
his evaluative criteria and perhaps even emotional responsiveness to art by including psychoanalytic ideas in his formal assessments.
Finally, the investigation reveals tensions among several of
the evaluative criteria, such as between environmental outcome and efficiency, and between cost - effectiveness and incentives for participation and compliance.
Grounded Theory Method: Procedures, Canons, and
Evaluative Criteria.