Transcript MCA Namibia

MCA Namibia
Monitoring and Evaluation Orientation
17 th May 2011
Presentation Overview
 Introduction
 Basic M&E Concepts
 MCA-N’s M&E expectations
 Overview of MCA-N’s grant-related M&E activities
Introduction
A focus on results is one of the core
principles on which the MCC was founded
and an important aspect of this focus is the
M&E of programs
 M&E helps to boost the effectiveness,
accountability, and transparency of
development assistance
 In the short-term, it improves
management decision making and over
the long-term, it contributes to better
design of development projects
 MCC Policy for Monitoring and Evaluation
guides MCA’s M&E requirements
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Basic concepts of MONITORING AND
EVALUATION
 Monitoring –systematic collection of data on specified
indicators to provide indications of progress.
 Evaluation –measures the changes in individual,
household or community income and other aspects of
well-being that result from a particular project or
program.
Basic concepts of MONITORING AND
EVALUATION
 Activity – Actions taken or work performed through
which inputs, such as funds, technical assistance and
other types of resources are mobilized to produce
specific outputs.
 Indicator – Quantitative or qualitative variable that
provides a simple and reliable means to measure
achievement of an intervention.
Basic concepts of MONITORING AND
EVALUATION
 Input – Financial, human, and material resources used
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during an intervention.
Output – The direct results of a project activity. The
goods or services produced by the implementation of an
Activity.
Outcome –intermediate- or medium-term
effects/results of an intervention’s Outputs.
Objective –intermediate or long-term effects/results of
an intervention’s outputs.
Target – The expected results for a particular indicator to
be met by a certain point in time.
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Results-Chain
Inputs
Activities
Outputs
Outcomes
Indicators
Assumptions/Risks
Impact
Result statements and Indicators to monitor
results
Principle of Results
Based Planning
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If a problem is caused by three conditions
All three
conditions
must
be
addressed
Interventions must not only be necessary, but
also sufficient to achieve the expected result
Results Language = Change Language
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Action Language
 expresses results from
the provider’s
perspective
 can be interpreted in
many ways
 focuses on completion of
activities
Change Language
 describes changes in the
conditions of people
 sets precise criteria for
success
 focuses on results,
leaving options on how to
achieve them
Quality Criteria for a Results statement
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Is the scale/scope realistically within the control of you and
your partners?
Is it stated using change language?
Make sure it is SMART – Specific, Measurable, Achievable,
Relevant, Time bound
Take reference to strategy out of sentence
Result statement: Improved knowledge base of
livestock producers in NCA
Don’t confuse indicator formulation with
results statement !
 An indicator is neutral, does not pre-judge or set
targets, is therefore “empty of data”, i.e., data still
has to be collected:

Indicator: % of all trained farmers in NCA using new farming
technologies. NOT “90% of all trained farmers in NCA using new
farming technologies.
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Definition:
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Denominator: # of trained farmers using new technologies
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Numerator: Total # of Farmers trained
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Baseline: 10%
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Target Year 1: 45% and Target year 2: 95%
An indicator should…
 state whom/where /what is being measured: e.g. # of girls
in x district
 be expressed in quantifiable units:

Unit of measure : %, number, ratio
Or descriptive words
 Be disaggregated by sex whenever possible!
Types of indicators
Quantitative statistical
measures:
Qualitative judgments
or perceptions:
• number of
• presence of
• frequency of
• quality of
• % of
• extent of
• variance with
• level of
Checklist for INDICATORS
 Validity - Does it measure the 15
result?
 Reliability - Is it a consistent measure over time and, if supplied
externally, will it continue to be available?
 Sensitivity - When a change occurs will it be sensitive to those
changes?
 Simplicity - Will it be easy to collect and analyze the information?
 Equality – Is the status or situation of women and men compared?
Comparisons between ethnicity…geography?
 Utility - Will the information be useful for decision-making and
learning?
 Affordability – Do we have the resources to collect the
information? What baseline do we have?
MCA-N’s M&E expectations
 All Grantees are required to have M&E Plans specifying expected
results, data collection processes, and reporting frequency
 M&E Plan: Objectives, Activities, Results, Indicators and
definition, Targets, Data sources, Frequency
 Data collection Process: Who is going to collect data on
indicators? How is data going to be stored? How frequent is data
going to be collected? Are you going to collect baseline data before
you intervention, how or who is going to do it?
 Reporting: Report back on indicators-How often? Who is going to
compile the report?
Overview of MCA-N’s grant-related M&E
activities (CS/INP)
CS (WWW and Grantees) and (NRI and Grantees)
INP activity implementation
CS/INP Baseline survey
M&E Plans/Reports from Grantees
Data Collection Plan by Activity implementers
CS/INP Evaluation
Overview of MCA-N’s grant-related M&E
activities (LMEF)
LMEF Activity
implementation (Grantees)
M&E Plans/Reports from
Grantees
LMEF Evaluation
THANK YOU!!!
Q&A