CESBC Workshop: Re-Imagining Indigenous Evaluation Systems

  • 27 Oct 2022
  • 09:00 - 17:00
  • Creekside Community Centre, 1 Athletes Way, Vancouver, BC V5Y 0B1 ,Vancouver
  • 3

Registration

  • (Members not in our CES BC Chapter system please email membership confirmation to cesbc.louise.mason@gmail.com)
  • Proof required

Registration is closed

CESBC (Pre-Conference) Professional Development Workshop:

Re-Imagining Indigenous Evaluation Systems presented by Marissa Hill

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  • Space is limited to 25 people - Registration closes on Tuesday 25 October (dietary restrictions may not be catered for if you register after Thursday 20 October)
  • For those that need support to attend, we have our DEI fund: evaluationbc.ca/DEI-Fund

  • To register for the Conference CLICK HERE

Date: Thursday October 27, 2022

Time: 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Location: Creekside Community Centre, 1 Athletes Way, Vancouver, BC V5Y 0B1

Lunch: Included

Topic:  Re-Imagining Indigenous Evaluation Systems

Background: Unlearning colonial ways of knowing and being is a lifelong journey, and how we go about Indigenous evaluation is very contextual - differing across people and places. Within Indigenous ways of knowing and being, we are not given everything we need to know all at one time. We are gifted and receive what we need to know, when and how we need to know it, and over time we add to the bundle of tools, resources, learnings, and relationships that we carry to help us navigate our journeys in life.

Learning Outcomes: Today, you won’t leave with an Indigenous evaluation “how to” – that is for you to gather on your own over time. Through this hands-on, dialogue-based workshop, you will engage in self and group reflection and discussion about Indigenous and Western evaluation methodologies and the key systemic barriers that exist within the context of Indigenous evaluation, and will start to articulate your individual and shared commitments to transform evaluation practice moving forward. This workshop is one stop on your journey of decolonizing your evaluation practice, and will give you one more experience to add to your bundle.

Participants: This is for new and emerging evaluators, or long-term evaluators, and will be a safe space to start to unlearn and re-imagine critical aspects of your practice

Presenter: Marissa Hill

hniin, núu, hadih, tansi, tawnshi, she:kon, kwei, kwe’, atelihai, ainngai, edlanet’e, oki, waaciye, bonjour, hello!

Marissa (she/her) is a citizen of the Métis Nation of Ontario, born and raised in Georgian Bay on the traditional territory of the Huron-Wendat and within the historic Georgian Bay Metis Community, on pre-confederation treaty 5 and 16 territory. Marissa is the Indigenous Innovation Lab Manager at the Indigenous Innovation Initiative, where she is co-creating a first-of-its-kind pre-seed through scale innovation lab in partnership with community, partners, and innovators. She was previously the Knowledge Management and Translation Associate for the Indigenous Innovation Initiative, and continues to play a leadership role in knowledge and data governance, impact measurement, evaluation, and knowledge sharing functions. Marissa is committed to engaging in these activities through co-creation and using Indigenous methodologies that centre First Nation, Inuit, and Métis Worldviews, Values, Principles, and Protocols.

Marissa is the lead author of the Inquiry and Learning Bundle and the Indigenous Knowledges and Data Governance Protocol that were co-created in partnership with First Nation, Inuit, and Métis Elders, Knowledge Keepers, community members, and ecosystem partners and is the co-author of the Canadian Science and Policy Magazine article, Cultural Safety: The Criticality of Indigenous Knowledges and Data. Marissa’s expertise and passion is rooted in Indigenous data sovereignty, including intellectual property, and she enjoys sharing her learnings around decolonized research, evaluation, impact measurement, and performance measurement across Turtle Island – including on the stages of SOCAP, the Canadian Evaluation Society, the Canadian Association for the Study of International Development, the Million Lives Club, and the Canadian Council for Small Business and Entrepreneurship, and in the boardrooms of numerous government offices.

Miigwetch, tsok sinlé, mussi cho, mikwêc, marsee, nia:wen, wela'lioq, nakurmiik, mársi,  nitsiniiyi'taki, haw’aa, merci, thank you!

Cancellation Policy: 50% refund one month before event. After that Substitute name only.





Professional Development


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