Post on 31-Mar-2015
Capacity development & learning in evaluationUganda Evaluation Week19th to 223rd May 2014
Contents
1. What do we mean by evaluation capacity?2. Links to managing for results3. Evidence from organisations who have
introduced results management systems4. The challenge of evaluation culture5. The experience of DFID6. Results system or results culture7. Conclusions
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What do we mean by evaluation capacity?
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Individual
Organisation
Enabling environment
systems
Promoting accountability, transparency
& learning
Question policies and
practices
Capacity empowers
stakeholders to …
Building blocks?A process of good governance?
Both ?Building blocks
Process
Leads to demand,
supply and use of
evaluation
Individual Level
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Individuals’ knowledge, skills and competences
• Senior management capacity for strategy & planning• At mid-management level, understanding of the role of
evaluation as a tool for effectively achieving development results.
• Behavioural independence and professional competences of those who manage and/ or conduct evaluations.
Source: Adapted from Segone, 2010, Moving from policies to results by developing national capacities for country ledmonitoring and evaluation systems.
Institutional Level
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The institutional framework
• Evaluation policy exists and is implemented.• An evaluation unit with a clearly defined role, responsibilities.• Functional Quality Assurance system.• Independence of funding for evaluations.• System to plan, undertake and report evaluation findings in an
independent, credible and useful way exists.• Open dissemination of evaluation results.• Knowledge management systems in support of the evaluation function
exists and is used.
Source: Adapted from Segone, 2010, Moving from policies to results by developing national capacities for country led monitoring and evaluation systems.
Enabling Environment
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Source: Adapted from Segone, 2010, Moving from policies to results by developing national capacities for country ledmonitoring and evaluation systems.
A context that fosters the performance and results of individuals and organizations
• Functioning National voluntary organisation for professional evaluation.
• National policy on evaluation• Strong evaluation culture.• Public administration committed to transparency and managing for results
and accountability.• Political will to institutionalize evaluation.• Existence of adequate information and statistical systems.• Legislation and/or policies to institutionalize monitoring and evaluation
systems
All or nothing?
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Individual Skills are lacking at all levels
Demand doesn’t emerge
OrganisationLack of
structures and processes
Individuals’ skills are not applied
EnvironmentAbsence of
legislation & supportive
policies
Lack of clarity in roles and
responsibilities
Neglect of… Means that …
Results management framework
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Strategic Results Framework• Objectives, indicators &
strategy• Roles & responsibility
Programme Results Framework• Results chain & theory of change• Align with strategic framework• Performance indicators
Credible measurement & analysis• Measure & assess results• Assess contribution to strategic
objectives
Credible performance reporting• Relevant, timely & reliable
reporting
Use results to improveperformance• Adjust the programme• Develop lessons & good practices
Source: Itad Ltd, adapted from ‘Managing for Development Results Handbook’
Expectations for managers
Planning• Understanding the theory of change• Setting out performance expectations
Implementation• Measure and analyse results and assess
contribution
Decision-making & learning
• Deliberately learn from evidence and analysis
Accountability• Reporting on performance achieved against
expectations
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Mayne, John (2008) Building an evaluative culture for effective evaluation and results management. Institutional Learning and Change (ILAC) Initiative Brief 20. CGIAR 4p
Evaluations of RBM• UNDP (2007)• Significant progress was made on: on sensitising staff to results; and on creating
the tools to enable a fast and efficient flow of information. • Managing for results has proved harder to achieve. Stronger emphasis on resource
mobilisation and delivery, a culture fostering a low level of risk-taking, weak information systems at country level, the lack of clear lines of accountability and the lack of a staff incentive structure all work against building a strong culture of results.
• Finland (2010)• Tools and procedures are comprehensive and well established . Good standards of
project design are not consistently applied.• Low priority given by managers to monitoring, reporting and evaluation. Most
monitoring reports were activity-based or financial and there was little reporting against logframes.
• Managing for results depends not only on technical methodology, but also on the way the development cooperation programme is organised and managed. Finland’s approach is characterised as being risk-averse; few examples of results being used to inform policy.
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‘Can we demonstrate the difference that Norwegian aid makes?’ Overall conclusion• Although there are some elements of good
foundations for better results measurement, current arrangements lack the strength of leadership, depth of guidance and coherence of procedures necessary for effective evaluation of Norwegian aid.• As a result of a lack of incentives, poor processes
for planning and monitoring grants, and weaknesses in the procedures for evaluations, this cannot be demonstrated.
ITAD Ltd (2014) Can we demonstrate the difference that Norwegian Aid makes? Evaluation of results measurement and how this can be improvedAvailable at: http://www.norad.no/en/tools-and-publications/publications/evaluations/publication?key=412342
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What is an evaluative culture?• An organization with a strong evaluative culture:
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Mayne, John (2008) Building an evaluative culture for effective evaluation and results management. Institutional Learning and Change (ILAC) Initiative Brief 20. CGIAR 4p
engages in self-reflection and self-examination:• deliberately seeks evidence
on what it is achieving, such as through monitoring and evaluation,
• uses results information to challenge and support what it is doing, and values candour, challenge and genuine dialogue;
engages in evidence-based learning:• makes time to learn in a
structured fashion,• learns from mistakes and
weak performance, and• encourages knowledge
sharing;
encourages experimentation and change:• supports deliberate risk
taking, and• seeks out new ways of
doing business.
UK Department for International Development• A 2009 study into DFID’s evaluation reports found: • Weaknesses were systemic in nature linked to top management,
requiring a significant change in culture. • A key overarching problem was an unduly defensive attitude to
the findings from evaluation.• Other detailed recommendations called for:
• evaluability issues to be considered at the planning stage; • for training of staff; • for strengthening the evidence base that underpins evaluations; and • for requiring managers to make a formal response to evaluations.
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Roger C Riddell (2009) The Quality of DFID’s Evaluation Reports and Assurance Systems. IACDI (The Independent Advisory Committee on Development Impact)
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Five features of DFID’s approach combine to justify high ratings :
Continuity of guidance from planning a project Business Case; quality assurance arrangements; evaluation policy; and evaluation training materials, with some cross referencing.
Recognition that a clear logic model and results based on prior evidence strengthens the quality of project design rather than being a formality to complete a project proposal.
Evaluability is assessed from several perspectives: expected impact and outcomes; strength of the evidence base; theory of change; and what arrangements are need to measure, monitor and evaluate progress and results.
Documentation includes detailed descriptions, training or self-briefing materials and examples for staff to follow.
There is consistency of message across planning guidance, appraisal and approval, with a detailed checklist for quality assurance.
DFID – Highly rated for evaluability
Source: ITAD Ltd (2014) Can we demonstrate the difference that Norwegian aid makes? An evaluation of results measurement and how this can be improved. Annex 5 (available on www.norad.no/evaluation)
DFID – Embedding
• Significant increase in the quantity of evaluations commissioned increased from 12 per year, prior to 2011, to an estimated 40 completed evaluations in 2013/14.
• The embedding process has increased the actual and potential demand. • Decision to evaluate now made during the preparation of BCs. Good for programme
performance, but a lack of a broader strategic focus. • Depth of this capacity is less than required with 81% accredited to date only at the
foundation or competent level • Gaps in capacity relate to: • understanding why and when to commission evaluation • enhancing the contexts of evaluations and engaging stakeholders appropriately • selecting and implementing appropriate evaluation approaches while ensuring
reliability of data and validity of analysis • reporting and presenting information in a useful and timely manner.
• Need to:• strengthen evaluation governance; develop a DFID evaluation strategy 15
Source DFID (2014) Rapid Review of Embedding Evaluation in UK DFID
Embedding: Business Cases and Evaluation advisorsSince 2011: 37 advisers in a evaluation role;
150 staff accredited in evaluation and 700 people receiving basic training.
Core quality model
Quality assurance
Standards
Perfor-mance
Technical guidance
How to do it
Training
ProgrammeProcedures, roles & responsibilities
Results & evaluability
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DFID LearningDFID is the highest performing civil service main department for ‘learning and
development’. (Cabinet Office survey)• Evaluations are a key source of knowledge. • 40 evaluations completed in 2013-14. • 425 evaluations either underway or planned as at July 2013.
• Annual, mid-term and project completion reviews are an under-utilised resource. • Staff find it hard to identify what is important and what is irrelevant.• DFID’s ability to influence has been strengthened by its investment in knowledge.Issues:• Workload pressures restricts making time to learn. • Staff often feel under pressure to be positive about assessing both current and
future project performance. • Knowledge is sometimes selectively used to support decision-making.• Positive bias links to a culture where staff have often felt afraid to discuss failure.• Many evaluations are not sufficiently concise or timely to affect decision-making. 17
Source: Independent Commission for Aid Impact (2014) How DFID Learns
UK – National Audit Office
Findings• Significant spend• Coverage incomplete• Rationale for what the
government evaluates is unclear.
• Evaluations often not robust enough to reliably identify the impact.
• Learning not used to improve impact and cost-effectiveness.
Recommendations
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£44m spent on government evaluation in 2010-11Estimated 102 FTE staff working on evaluation in the government
• Plan evaluation when designing all new policies.
• Design policy implementation to facilitate robust evaluation.
• Departments to make data available to independent evaluators for research purposes.
Source NAO (2014) Evaluation in Government
Results system or results culture?
19But these should not be mistaken for an evaluative culture. Indeed, on their own, they can become a burdensome system that does not help
management at all.
Many organizations have systems of results
A results-based planning system with results frameworks for programmes.
Results monitoring systems in place generating results data.
Evaluations undertaken to assess the results achieved by an evaluation unit.
Reporting systems in place providing data on the results achieved.
Mayne, John (2008) Building an evaluative culture for effective evaluation and results management. Institutional Learning and Change (ILAC) Initiative Brief 20. CGIAR 4p
Measures to foster an evaluative culture
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Leadership • Demonstrated senior management leadership and commitment• Regular informed demand for results information• Building capacity for results measurement and results management• Establishing and communicating a clear role and responsibilities for results
management
Organisational support structures • Supportive organizational incentives• Supportive organizational systems, practices and procedures• An outcome-oriented and supportive accountability regime• Learning-focused evaluation and monitoring
A learning focus • Building in learning• Tolerating and learning from mistakes
Mayne, John (2008) Building an evaluative culture for effective evaluation and results management. Institutional Learning and Change (ILAC) Initiative Brief 20. CGIAR
Conclusions – taking a positive view• Evaluation only one source of information alongside
research and implementation experience. ECD needs to inform how these work together.
• Quality evaluation is built on quality planning. ECD needs to be linked to better planning systems.
• Technical skills are necessary but are not sufficient. • Effective evaluation will be determined by the culture
and incentives in the organisation. • ECD is a journey, not a destination. Systems are not
static; they need continual review, learning and revision. There is no simple solution but rather systems need to be introduced, used, tested, reviewed and then updated in a rolling cycle.
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