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Final Project Evaluation Report
Poverty Alleviation in Tajikistan
through Education and Non-formal Training (PATENT)
Cologne, January 2011
Compiled by:
Thekla Kelbert &
Sinziger Str. 11
D-50968 Köln
Sherali Toshmurodov
13 Valadarskiy street,
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
European Commission budget line: BGUE-B2008-19.100200-C8-AIDCO
Reference: EuropeAid/126-844/L/ACT/TJ
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The project “Poverty Alleviation in Tajikistan through Education and Non-formal Training (PATENT)
was implemented by the Institute for International Cooperation of the German Adult Education
Association (dvv international) in partnership with the Association of Scientific and Technical
Intelligentsia (ASTI) and funded by the European Commission (80%) and the German Ministry for
Economic Co-operation and Development - BMZ (20%).
During the last month of project implementation (December 2010), this final, external evaluation of
the above mentioned project was conducted as originally stated in the planning documents. The
given evaluation of the ‘PATENT’ project was initiated by dvv international as the applicant of the
action and was prepared, discussed and agreed between the partners. The evaluation was conducted
in accordance with the TOR of the evaluation adopted by dvv international.
The results of the evaluation will be used to
• assess the relevance, effectiveness and weaknesses of the project planning and
implementation;
• measure the project impact on the target groups;
• improve the planning and implementation of similar projects in the future;
• assess the cooperation between the partners and stakeholders;
• generate ideas for follow up interventions and;
• fine tune the general country strategy of both partners in Tajikistan.
The results of the evaluation will be shared and discussed between the partners in order to improve
the performance in other/ new projects. The results of the evaluation will be provided to the
European Union ,the German Ministry for Economic Co-operation and Development (donors) and the
Ministry of Education of Tajikistan, as well as to other interested institutions working in the field of
adult education in Tajikistan.
Evaluation methodology
The project consists of a number of components including a labour market assessment, the
development of curricula for short-term vocational trainings at ten selected vocational education and
training (VET) schools, the provision of training equipment and machinery as well as written training
material to the schools, the further qualification of teachers and the school management, provision
of vocational short term courses for 2000 students, the provision of professional guidance and
business consultancy for the graduates, the promotion of social partnership mechanisms, and a
public relations campaign promoting a positive image of VET in the Tajik society.
The methods applied during the investigation thus included desk studies of relevant project
documentation in the evaluators’ home countries and upon arrival in Tajikistan as well as during the
course of the evaluation as relevant documents kept being supplied to the evaluation team (also
referred to as ‘the team’) throughout the investigation. Six out of ten VET schools who had received
inputs through the project were visited – three of which in Khatlon Province and three in Sughd
Province. At the schools, the material inputs in form of equipment and written training materials
were assessed and interviews with the different groups of beneficiaries – school management,
teachers and course participants – were conducted. In addition, focus group discussions were held
with the participants of those courses that were still on-going or had just finished, and selected
businesses that had started up as a result of the project intervention were visited. ASTI staff was
interviewed in Dushanbe, Kulyab and Khujand and accompanied the evaluation team during school
visits. Informal methods like informal conversations and observation were used in addition. Wherever
possible, the team tried to triangulate information received from different sources like dvv
international, ASTI staff and target groups and answers to common questions were compared and
analysed. Where possible, certain stakeholders and members of the target group were interviewed
separately, especially the students in order to have open democratic discussions without authorities
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from the schools or teachers present. In some cases groups of women were interviewed separately
from men for instance a small group of graduates from an accounting course in Djabor Rasulovskij
District, the staff of one of the small businesses that had opened as a result of the business
competition and some all-female groups of the sewing courses.
Field investigations for the evaluation took place between 11 and 18 December 2010. The evaluation
team consisted of an international team leader with several years of work experience in international
development assistance in Tajikistan and a local co-evaluator with a long-standing background of
project administration and management in Tajikistan and abroad.
PATENT sewing class participants
PATENT welding class participants
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2. Summary
The project activities were implemented as planned, with only very minor alterations which are
described below and which did not have any negative effect on the achievement of project results.
The status quo in the beneficiary VET schools has been successfully improved in terms of equipment
as well as teaching and management methods. The implementation of short-term vocational courses
was geared towards the poorer parts of the local population and applying the interactive teaching
methods and new equipment in order to raise the practical component of the course work. The
courses were evaluated very positively by the student groups interviewed. A visible motivation of VET
school staff and management to upkeep these positive changes was observed in all the schools.
The establishment of school advisory boards connecting social partners and VET schools and
especially the PR campaign preceding and accompanying the implementation process at school level
are seen as further strong sides of the project.
The economic impact at target group level has been less clearly visible and measurable - partly due to
weaknesses in the project's monitoring and evaluation framework. Especially the information on the
employment situation and income levels of course participants was patchy. One more round of data
collection 3 months after the graduation of the last participants however is still outstanding and will
increase clarity on the achievement of result No.1.
2.1 Summary of major findings
Main project results according to logframe indicators
Teaching material
The curricula and handbooks on management and modern methods of teaching will have a lasting
impact on the effectiveness of teaching and management and increase the quality of education
offered by schools as they will be applied to overall school management and in short-term courses
offered – in most cases on a commercial basis – in the future. The evaluation team got very positive
comments on the modern teaching methods from both teachers and course participants interviewed:
“It is even easier for us teachers when we employ new methods like group work and active utilization
of the theoretical contents during classes than what it used to be previously.”
Curriculum development
See “institutional impacts” and “sustainability” below.
Provision of equipment to schools
The equipment provided to the schools was being used by the course participants the evaluation
team has met and it was mentioned by all of the VET school directors and teachers as one of the
project components having the most positive and lasting impact on an improved learning (and
teaching) situation in the schools.
Impact of short-term courses on the participants
The underlying problem to the difficulties in measuring and evaluating project impact in terms of the
effect on the beneficiary level is actually related to planning – systematic follow-up and information
collection on course graduates was not planned as a project activity and thus no time and financial
resources had been allocated to it. If there is insufficient data collected to verify the improvement of
the employment situation of course participants after graduation of if some initial monitoring results
are weakly documented, the evaluation of the relevant project results and the specific objective
becomes difficult.
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Trainings for management and teaching staff
One can describe the level of participation of the school managements in project activities and their
use of the gained professional skills on management in day-to-day management as active, but varying
across the 10 schools to some extent. Some schools can be singled out very positively regarding
active project engagement of their directors and deputies, who coordinated and managed the short
term courses well together with their team of teachers and who have changed some management
processes of the school (Istaravshan, Sarband and Khujand city).
Across the board the quality of the trainings on subjects like leadership, fundraising, and
management of VET schools were judged positively by directors and their deputies and seen as a
good input into capacity development for the staff towards reforming the management style used in
the VET system.
The capacities of the VET schools were also improved through conducting a big number of trainings
for the teachers on modern teaching methodologies and labour market analysis. The trainings aimed
at enhancing their knowledge of interactive teaching methods, team work and conflict management,
substantially changing the old teaching methodologies of vocational schools. The teachers have found
these methods easy to use and more productive compared to the old system of teaching. Interviews
with teachers and course participants have shown that the new methods quickly led to visible
change, and the students who were taught using new methods have gained more knowledge
especially in the realm of the practical application of their vocational skills.
Development of handbooks for VET school staff
A considerable amount of the copies of the two handbooks on management of vocational education
and on methods of interactive education were delivered to the schools with a big delay, starting only
from the third quarter of 2010. Some amount of handbooks was still to be printed and distributed at
the time of the evaluation.
Business consulting desks
During interviews it became clear that the business consulting desks have been established at all
schools visited. One person around from among the teaching staff was usually assigned the
responsibility for this activity, had received training as part of PATENT, and some were keeping
records on their clients and the kind of services provided
In focus group discussions with course participants – many of who had attended business workshops
organized by ASTI – it was found striking how confident some were about opening their own
businesses – men as much as women. They were also informed about the existence of the business
consulting desks and knew that they can turn to the desk for support and advise any time.
Professional guidance
Assuming that the workshops and round tables were conducted professionally and with meaningful
content (as according to plan), one can suppose that the understanding of the importance of
acquiring a profession and of employment and self-employment was raised among the VET school
staff and stakeholders.
Advisory Boards
According to result number 4 and the related project activities, a partnership strategy should be
developed for further support to the vocational schools towards employment or self-employment of
graduates and the establishment of a lasting cooperation between vocational schools, local
communities and governmental authorities. However, no written strategy, plan of activities,
framework or responsibilities concerning the operation and more importantly the future of the
advisory boards were presented to the evaluation team. There is no real mechanism jointly
developed for the advisory boards to continue their activities in support of the respective VET
schools.
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Study Tour to Germany
The study tour to Germany organised by dvv international for VET school directors and social partners
from local authorities had a lasting impact on the vision on further development of adult education in
the country. According to some interviewed participants they received many ideas on new
management and teaching methods, especially on how to meet market and population needs
through the VET courses offered, and on an effective, systematic cooperation between VET schools
and social partners.
Business contest
164 learners got business planning training and 64 took part in the competition. Out of these, 8
winners were awarded € 500 each. As part of the project revision in June 2010 the number of grants
given to the winners of the business idea competition was increased from 2 to 8 which was a good
decision as the money benefits the target group directly – not only the winner, but also their future
employees – and it increased the incentive for people to take business planning seriously and
participate in the competition.
The owners of three businesses newly opened with the help of a PATENT grant and their employees
who the evaluation team met made a satisfied impression, they were receiving clients and were able
to fully equip their business premises with the help of the grant and in some cases their own capital.
Out of the 11 people working in the successful businesses 10 were women.
PR campaign
See the findings on “institutional impacts”, below.
Project effectiveness
The selection of the short-course format for PATENT proved to be a very effective choice, well-
adapted to the local context, especially as it also included a scholarship component to encourage
unemployed parts of the population to invest a smaller amount of their time in vocational education
than usually required for the classical – longer – VET courses. The quality of the courses was judged
as very good by the students and the stationeries, training materials and text books provided as well
as the scholarships at the amount of 10 € were found useful and effective.
A positive impact at target group level that can be singled out is the income generation opportunities
that a big number of women (100% of participants in sewing classes and more than 50% of
participants in accounting/ IT classes) have received. Especially the seamstresses now have the
opportunity to create incomes for their families working from home which is important especially to
those who have children and a household to take care of and are often the only breadwinners
present in Tajikistan when their husbands have left for labour migration.
It is seen as a very good idea that during the courses on business planning, ASTI was also presenting
some local banks who offer credits to the course participants – as well as ASTI’s own small micro-
finance project. This could have improved the effectiveness of the project’s component on business
development. Unfortunately for unknown reasons, up until the time of the evaluation none of the
participants had applied to ASTI for micro-credits.
Institutional impacts
Positive impacts have clearly also been achieved at the level of the schools – concerning the
equipment provided for the PATENT short-courses which will be kept in use in the future, as well as
the improved capacity base among school management and teachers. However, sustainability issues
which might be connected with the improved human capacity will be touched upon below.
Another positive impact at school level which has not been included in the planning is the possibility
of the schools to start offering the short-term courses promoted under PATENT on a commercial basis
in the future. Many schools had already started doing this before the end of the project
implementation period. Together with the Department of Vocational Education of the Ministry of
Education, ASTI has developed curricula for welding, tailoring, electrician and accounting courses
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within the project. These curricula have been officially approved by MoE and will thus be used more
widely for other VET schools to conduct similar short term courses.
Looking at institutional impacts, furthermore the evaluation team got the impression that two years
after the transfer of the VET portfolio from MoLSP to MoE and given the on-going duplications in
some of their respective involvements, through the project their cooperation on the ground has been
strengthened and to some extent institutionalised as the employment centres of MoLSP became
strongly involved in the activities of the VET schools through the advisory boards and mutual
incentives to this cooperation were obvious.
The impacts of PATENT initiatives under results 3 and 5 – the promotion of the idea of social
partnerships and the PR campaign to raise the image of the VET sector – among potential social
partners and the wider public in the project sites have partly been hard to observe. However, a
selection of the very extensive and interesting material and documentation on the PR activities was
reviewed by the evaluation team in ASTI’s office in Khujand. The material can serve as a good basis
and best practice for future project interventions. It has to be stated positively that a high visibility of
the VET sector in general and public discussions of the social partnership concept have been achieved
through a very systematic and active PR campaign.
Sustainability
The official approval of the curricula developed as part of PATENT by MoE is a very positive achievement
in terms of the sustainable use of one of the central project outputs. This can thus have sustainable
impacts on the VET sector and potentially on a big number of future learners.
The sustainability of several project components and related results could be under threat due to a
combination of potential turnover of VET school staff and a lack of institutionalisation of knowledge
sharing, handover-procedures.
The advisory boards and business consulting desks in the schools – two important institutions created
as part of the PATENT intervention – are also at some risk of being unsustainable as their functioning,
mandates and tasks have not been institutionalised and documented.
From different meetings with ASTI staff we gained the impression that a lot of attention was paid to
day-to-day project management and the implementation of the planned activities whereas the aspect
of sustainability of some of the outcomes and impacts was not so present in the discussions and could
have been taken more seriously.
Monitoring and evaluation
The monitoring and evaluation framework of the project was not very elaborate and weakly
documented. It was also found to be not results- and impact-oriented enough. Quarterly monitoring
reports as mentioned in the grant proposal were not shown to the evaluation team. According to dvv
international Tashkent, project visits were taking place, but no findings and recommendations seem to
be documented in writing. Out of the three project evaluations planned, two were carried out after EU
approval had been sought for the change in plan. A first, internal project evaluation took place in the
20th month of project implementation which seems rather late given the plan to conduct one at 6 and
one at 12 months and that then the final evaluation was supposed to take place in month 22.
The main short-coming of project monitoring is the fact that merely the monitoring of inputs and
activities was done systematically. Any monitoring to be carried out with the purpose of measuring the
impact-related project indicators would have involved planning for that, including providing time and
financial resources as well as staff-time. This was not done well enough. A fact that leads to the finding
related to project effectiveness and impacts that the measurement of one of the most important
impact indicators – the employment situation of the 2000 VET school graduates from PATENT courses –
is hard to undertake.
One more finding is found as being crucial to the monitoring and evaluation framework of the project:
Except for a mini-baseline survey specifically related to result No.5, no baseline information has been
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collected – at least not to the knowledge of the evaluation team. Especially concerning the monitoring
and evaluation of results-achievement for results No. 1 and 2 it would have been highly
recommendable to conduct pragmatic baseline surveys as part of project planning which would have
had to be cost-efficient in terms of time and money spent, but could have significantly improved
planning and the opportunity to later evaluate and demonstrate the impacts made under PATENT.
Logframe Indicators
The specific objective “to increase the employment and self-employment opportunities for poor
unemployed” if achieved has the potential to contribute to the overall project objective - poverty
alleviation in Khatlon and Sughd. Unfortunately the employment rate as the indicator set to measure
the achievement of the specific objective seems rather unsuitable as already pointed out by the internal
project evaluation in August 2010 (Annex V, p.19).
The choice of indicators to measure the achievement of results No. 2, 4 and 5 in the logframe appear
suitable only to check on the implementation of activities, but not on the achievement of the related
results or on impacts. To carry out more meaningful monitoring and evaluation activities throughout
project implementation and during the final evaluation some impact-oriented indicators could have
been chosen in addition.
Project Planning
The overall project aims are compatible with the priorities of the partner Government and with
international development goals. Education is one of the priority sectors in the Government’s PRSP
and NDS documents as well as an important area of intervention outlined in the Joint Country
Partnership Strategy for 2010-2012 compiled jointly by a group of 12 international development
partners including the European Commission and signed with the Tajik Government.
Some of the documentation on components of project planning which should serve to facilitate a
smooth management of the project was not developed: A work plan document as a central reference
point clearly linking results and activities with timelines, responsibilities and budget figures was
lacking. The evaluation team has not seen an organogram or detailed TOR for the different project
staff which could have served to clarify the hierarchical levels of the relatively complex staffing set-up
of PATENT. No elaborate M&E plan was developed beyond the scope of the overview given in the
grant proposal. It was also found that a simplified project procurement plan adapted to the local
setting and project profile could have helped analyse and mitigate the risks of the delays in
publication of materials and in the purchase of the equipment for the course.
Risks and assumptions estimated during project planning
No major obstacles as outlined in the risks and assumptions matrix to project implementation as such
have occurred. Some risks were not taken into consideration during project planning that have led to
minor delays in the implementation of some activities: The first round of scholarship payments, the
delivery of equipment to the VET schools and the production of some of the education material.
Some of these issues were beyond the control of the implementer and of dvv international and
resulted only in minor delays in the implementation of activities.
The risk of high turnover of VET school staff during and after the implementation phase was
identified and included in the assumptions in the logframe. During the project implementation period
four out of the ten directors of the beneficiary VET schools were exchanged which is a considerable
proportion, especially as much of the implementation at school level will depend on them. Also for
the period after the end of the project implementation phase the risk that acquired knowledge and
improvements made will be lost or partly lost because of later turnover and a lack of
institutionalisation of VET school management processes still exists.
The internal project monitoring and evaluation system was not developed to an extent of foreseeing
periodic risk assessments and taking the developments of risks and assumptions into account during
project implementation more systematically.
Poverty orientation and selection of target groups
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The poverty orientation of the entire project and especially of result No.1 regarding the target group
of unemployed participants of the newly established short-term VET courses is prominent in the
planning documents and from interviews with project and VET school staff. Apart from some
unclarities regarding the selection of beneficiary VET schools, later on in the selection of the
individual participants a lot of attention has clearly been paid to poverty criteria – the family and
economic status of applicants. It is seen as a well-adapted and efficient approach to have involved
social partners and their knowledge of the local population in the selection of participants.
The selection of the beneficiary VET schools by ASTI and the Ministry of Education is not well
documented. The selection criteria remain unclear as an initial assessment of VET schools in the two
project regions done by ASTI was not presented to the evaluation team. Clearly, the major criterion
should have been poverty levels in the catchment area of the respective school and – based on this –
the perspectives for poverty reduction. Given the unclear accounts of the selection process, poverty
orientation in this regard was hard to assess for the evaluation team.
Overall project management
Activities at school level were carried out in good cooperation between stakeholders and on the
whole the activities were implemented satisfactorily and showing good results especially at the level
of the VET schools.
Despite this fact the evaluation team is drawing attention to some findings regarding day-to-day and
overall management which could be used to still improve overall performance, efficiency and results-
orientation in potential future projects:
Clear roles and responsibilities within the overall management hierarchy – involving Khujand,
Tashkent and Bonn – have been weakly documented. The chosen set-up bears consequences for
project efficiency. For example: Are four different management positions involved in the given project
– 2 of which in Tajikistan, 1 in Tashkent and one in Germany justified, and if so, how do they
coordinate their activities? Coordination and communication between the different levels as well as
oversight functions might have benefited from the existence of an overall work plan assigning roles
and responsibilities matched with the targeted project results.
As becomes clear from many of the more detailed findings below, project documentation on the
parts of ASTI and dvv international Tashkent, but also on the part of the individual VET schools could
have been more elaborate and systematic.
Project efficiency and financial management
Financial management
Certain issues regarding financial management had been pointed out already by the internal project
evaluation undertaken by dvv international Bonn in August 2010: “Due to the delay of project
activities the budget balance for the remaining implementation period is high (in relation to the
remaining time), creating the need for tighter budget management. The budget provides for
expenditure to be made at different locations and by different actors / offices. While each office (dvv
international in Bonn and Tashkent and ASTI in Khujand) seems to be well aware and up to date on
the actual expenditure for their location and activities, there seems to be a lack of effective central
steering when it comes to the overall expenditures and savings by budget item. In particular when
savings in specific budget lines create options to transfer the balance to a different location and
activity (which might be short of money), there is so far no standard communication procedure in
place. Usually this does not create problems in the beginning of project implementation, but can
create shortcomings at the end.” (Internal evaluation report p.11)
The evaluation team would agree that improvements are possible regarding internal communication
and systematic organisation of functions and duties of the various managers involved in financial
management of PATENT. It was not sufficiently clear from our interviews and observations who was
responsible for what in expenditure monitoring and oversight.
Final Project Evaluation Report PATENT Page 10 of 12
Project efficiency
The evaluation team calculated the ratio of expenditures directly impacting the target group vis-à-vis
the ratio spent on project management and administration. According to this, amounts spent on
activities directly benefiting the target group amounted to 64% of the total budget. Out of the total
budget, 27% were spent on management and administration-related activities of the project
implementer while 9% were spent on various staff of dvv international (Tashkent and Bonn).
2.2 Summary of major recommendations
Institutional impacts
Cooperation between stakeholders
(recommendation to dvv international and EU/BMZ, national and international partners)
Attention should be paid during potential future projects by both dvv international and any
implementing organisation on the ground to the involvement of both the Ministry of Education and
the Ministry of Labour and Social Protection in the VET sector. Any future project should keep in mind
as an overall goal the establishment/ furthering of good cooperation and coordination between the
two ministries and their partners and their mutual influence on results achievement. In their support,
international organisations should prioritise those adult and professional education institutions which
are really in need no matter which part of the VET sector portfolio (MoE or MoLSP) they belong to.
A more in-depth assessment of the status of the vocational education sector is highly recommended
to take well-adapted decisions in support of the VET schools. An assessment could be carried out by
interested international organisations and partners.
Sustainability
(recommendations to dvv international and ASTI)
More emphasis could have been given to sustainability aspects from the side of dvv international
during project planning and oversight. The sustainability of project outputs like certain services,
committees or boards – e.g. the advisory boards and business consulting desks of PATENT – should
have been taken into account. Strategies and plans could have been developed during planning
and/or implementation in order to improve their potential sustainability.
Labour market analysis
(recommendation to VET school management, MoE, MoLSP)
It is highly recommended that the labour market analysis be systematized and conducted at regular
intervals by those stakeholders best positioned for this task in the vocational sector and their
partners. Locally this might be an activity to be taken up by individual VET schools or a group of
schools situated close to one another. To produce more general analyses however, the labour markets
and economic and social situation in Tajikistan, Russian and Kazakhstan would have to be considered.
Such an exercise would probably have to be carried out by the relevant ministries with the assistance
of international partners like ILO, IOM and others. A pragmatic idea for the level of the VET schools
could be to conduct a survey among former graduates whenever they might do a next labour market
analysis in order to generate data on the employment situation of their graduates.
(recommendation to EC and BMZ)
In any project focusing mainly on capacity-building among individuals and institutions it will be
difficult to achieve lasting change in a two-year timeframe. Support to dvv international for future
initiatives in a similar direction or for follow-ups to the input provided as part of PATENT might be
considered.
Final Project Evaluation Report PATENT Page 11 of 12
Monitoring and evaluation
(recommendation to dvv international and EC/BMZ)
In future projects monitoring and evaluation should be better integrated in project planning and
implementation. Related activities including the generation of baseline data should be planned,
sufficiently resourced and then carried out systematically according to plan. Timeframes for
evaluation activities should be kept. The planned M&E system should certainly provide detailed
information on activity implementation, but also take into account questions related to project
impact.
(recommendations to dvv international and ASTI)
Monitoring and evaluation data should be well kept and made available to all concerned with project
implementation and management in formats that are easily understandable.
Especially with regards to the indicator for result No.1 – it should be strongly considered by dvv
international and ASTI to still invest into some more mini-surveys to generate data on the
employment situation of PATENT graduates.
Project planning and logical framework
(recommendations to dvv international)
In future interventions attention should be paid during planning on the potential need to conduct
well-adapted, cost-efficient baseline studies at early stages in order to generate data that can later be
vital for the evaluation of some important project results and impacts.
Impact-related indicators and sources of verification rather than only activity-related indicators (like
for results 2 and 5 of PATENT) should be developed wherever possible to measure and demonstrate
project impacts – something that should be kept in mind in future potential initiatives.
Risk assumptions estimated during project planning
(recommendation to ASTI)
To mitigate the risks to implementation and sustainability caused by high turnover of school directors
(four out of ten already during the on-going project implementation), it is advisable that deputy
directors are included in most trainings and management-related activities as far as possible.
Knowledge-sharing events should also be encouraged at the level of schools and included in project
activities so that the knowledge and skills acquired also by teaching staff are disseminated more
widely and retained in the schools once trained staff members leave.
Poverty alleviation and the selection of target groups
(recommendation to dvv international and implementing partners)
The process of selecting VET schools as beneficiaries and partners in future interventions is seen as
crucial for the achievement of project results – in terms of the varying levels of VET schools’
capacities and willingness to cooperate – and for the attainment of overall objectives such as poverty
reduction taking into account the schools’ catchment area. It is thus of utmost importance to do this
activity well. In future, dvv international should pay very active attention to the way the selection
process is undertaken by the implementer and the Ministry of Education.
Overall project management
(recommendations to dvv international)
In future project initiatives it would be advisable to develop certain management documents like an M&E
plan and an overall work plan document in some more detail. This process can serve the clarification of
management inputs and responsibilities during project planning and then offers an improved the basis for
implementation.
A filing system should have been kept by dvv international to ensure the availability of information
Final Project Evaluation Report PATENT Page 12 of 12
relevant for project management, monitoring and evaluation and reporting in one central place. This
would also be a good source to demonstrate some of the outputs and positive results of projects.
For future projects an oversight of project implementation and monitoring and evaluation will be more
effective through the office of dvv international in Dushanbe in order to ensure a closer coordination with
implementing partners and stakeholders and to closely monitor the activities in the place. Assigning these
functions to the Tajikistan country office will improve efficiency in monitoring and ensure quick reactions
from the side of dvv international in case of need.
Documentation and transparency at school level
(recommendation to VET school management and its partners)
As different actors are supporting the schools, it would be good to improve the records management and
filing systems of the schools, especially a database of received external and internal inputs could improve
management and serve as a good information basis for national and international stakeholders.
Elements to be applied in potential future projects
(recommendations to dvv international and the EC)
We recommend that it would be pragmatic and efficient to use standards adopted in different fields as
part of the PATENT intervention in future projects where applicable: questionnaires and methodology for
the labour market analysis, criteria and procedures for the selection of students and methodology of
curriculum development.
Trainings in results-oriented programme and project management in order to improve project planning,
implementation and M&E aspects for future potential project managers of ASTI or other potential partner
organisations implementing future projects are recommended.
Project efficiency and financial management
(recommendations to dvv international)
In future initiatives of dvv international cooperating with a local implementer, the ratio of administration
and management costs to expenditures directly benefiting the target groups of PATENT should be kept in
mind when planning for staffing structures and equipment provided to the implementer. It might be
worthwhile considering leaner and less complex management structures both with a view to increasing
the proportion of the budget spent on target group benefits and with a view to facilitating project
management by arranging the levels and responsibilities involved more clearly.
Tailor shop with four employees opened with PATENT grant