Difference between revisions of "Impact Monitoring Guidelines"
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*consider [[Research Ethics|research ethics]] | *consider [[Research Ethics|research ethics]] | ||
− | The following tables show in more detail typical steps for baseline and impact studies, which we furthermore recommend and support. | + | The following tables show in more detail typical steps for baseline and impact studies, which we furthermore recommend and support. |
= Introduction = | = Introduction = | ||
− | + | Development interventions are executed with the ultimate aim of changing the living situation in less developed countries. What is often thoroughly investigated are the inputs to a development intervention and its immediate outputs - how much money is spent, how many children vaccinated, business trainings conducted or latrines installed. Assessing the impacts of a development intervention though - the aforementioned amelioration of living standards - only took centre stage roughly within the last decade and is part of a movement towards evidence-based development policy making. | |
= Preparation = | = Preparation = | ||
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+ | [[Category:Impacts]] | ||
[[Category:Monitoring]] | [[Category:Monitoring]] | ||
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Revision as of 12:53, 7 August 2013
Overview
The Impact Monitoring Group of Energising Development has developed recommendations for sound impact assessments.
We recommend to:
- use the recommended list of indicators
- conduct baseline studies before project intervention and impact studies after households, social infrastructure or SMEs received access to modern energy
- use a theory based approach by applying the result chain for developing the study design
- use a mixed methods approach: the logic of the comparative advantages of methods: i.e. the mix of quantitative (standardised household interviews) and qualitative methods (open / semi-structured interviews with key persons and households or focus group discussions)
- include, wherever possible, control groups (households which do not have acces to modern energy) into your baseline and impact study
- consider research ethics
The following tables show in more detail typical steps for baseline and impact studies, which we furthermore recommend and support.
Introduction
Development interventions are executed with the ultimate aim of changing the living situation in less developed countries. What is often thoroughly investigated are the inputs to a development intervention and its immediate outputs - how much money is spent, how many children vaccinated, business trainings conducted or latrines installed. Assessing the impacts of a development intervention though - the aforementioned amelioration of living standards - only took centre stage roughly within the last decade and is part of a movement towards evidence-based development policy making.
Preparation
Tasks | Materials/ Support | Library |
Terms for Consultants/ Enumerators |
|
ToR Consultants: |
Selection Consultant/ Enumerators |
|
|
Study of available documents and statistics on national development goals and policies, national sector goals and policies, BMZ goals and concept for the partner country |
|
|
Developing of Results Chains/ Indicators (consider
undesired side effects being positive or negative) |
Cooking:
| |
Developing of Questionnaires, interview guidelines, PRA tools (MAPP), observation criteria and other tools (catalogue of methods) | ||
Sampling/ Selection target Group |
|
|
Training of Supervisors and Enumerators/ Pretesting |
|
|
Implementation
Task | Materials/ Support | Library |
Logistics | Checklist on how to implement HH Interviews |
|
Conducting Interviews |
| |
Data entry |
Data Analysis/ Reporting
Task | Materials/ Support | Library |
Data analysis |
| |
Data interpretation – in exchange with the project team (in a workshop) |
|
|
Report writing (+ summary writing) |
|
|
Handover of raw data |
|