Intergenerational learning rarely produces single, linear results. A coding workshop might lift digital confidence for a grandparent, spark leadership in a teenager, and trigger neighborhood volunteering the following month. Map short-term outcomes like knowledge gains, intermediate shifts like increased cross-age empathy, and longer-term results such as school persistence or aging-in-place confidence. When ripples are visible, teams prioritize thoughtfully, choose feasible indicators, and avoid chasing every wave. Share one ripple your program unexpectedly created and how it changed your plans.
Funders may emphasize cost-effectiveness, teachers might care about attendance, youth often focus on relevance, and older adults treasure dignity and agency. Aligning these perspectives prevents fragmented data and conflicting expectations. Convene a brief roundtable—virtual or in person—where each group names the one change that truly matters. Translate that into observable, measurable signals. The process itself builds trust and reduces evaluation fatigue. Invite readers to post one stakeholder request that reshaped their measurement approach and why it was worth the pivot.