Statements A, B, C and D describe central aspects of evaluation and policy research, and F adds an important methodological note. A is true because evaluation research systematically judges programme effectiveness, while B correctly notes that formative evaluation is conducted during implementation to improve it. C is accurate in defining summative evaluation as focusing on end results, and D properly characterises policy research as evidence-oriented. F is also true since both domains often combine qualitative and quantitative methods, whereas E is false because evaluation is not restricted to randomised trials or purely quantitative approaches.
Option A:
Option A omits statement F, thereby neglecting the fact that mixed-methods designs are common and useful in both evaluation and policy research. While A, B, C and D are correct, the absence of F leaves out an important contemporary practice. Hence, this option is incomplete.
Option B:
Option B includes B, C, D and F but leaves out A, ignoring the fundamental role of evaluation research in assessing programme effectiveness. Without A, the combination does not fully capture what evaluation research entails. Therefore it cannot be considered correct.
Option C:
Option C is correct because it lists A, B, C, D and F, providing a comprehensive and accurate picture of what these research types do and how they are conducted. It excludes E, which unjustifiably narrows evaluation research to one design and excludes qualitative data. This combination therefore contains all and only the true statements.
Option D:
Option D wrongly includes statement E and omits B, misrepresenting both the scope of evaluation methods and the concept of formative evaluation. Since it mixes a false statement with correct ones and overlooks a true statement, this option is not acceptable.
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