1 / 11

Synthesis of the discussion so far...

Synthesis of the discussion so far. Experiential knowledge and staff observations (1).

mendel
Download Presentation

Synthesis of the discussion so far...

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Synthesis of the discussion so far...

  2. Experiential knowledge and staff observations (1) • Monitoring a rural seed fair: # of attendees; Value of goods sold; Participant feedback; Observation of field co. of huddle of farmers talking about skit;farmers crowding around reps of seed supplier; text from suppliers about future events. • Monitoring local dairy cooperative: Quality & volume of milk; membership rates of cooperative; observation of relationships of cooperative leader with community; attitudes of cooperative members

  3. Value of experiential knowledge and staff observations (2) • The informal knowledge from observation is only a snapshot but carries information about attitudes, trust, relationships of market actors (S.K. Gurunathan – CARE) • Nuggets capture leading outcomes suggesting what is going well and should be built on, what is not going well and should be improved; (C. Duncan – EWB) • This knowledge is collected, communicated and used to user action quickly. • Telling us about sustainability of systemic changes that are founded on behaviour changes. Contributing to evidence about sustainability of intervention; (E. Islam – CARE) • Helping us to untangle the attribution of behaviour changes. (E. Islam - CARE; C. Duncan – EWB)

  4. Information for different users and different uses • Monitoring and evaluation should be multi-purpose: • Serving different users with • Different types of information (content and characteristics) for • Different purposes • This is the case for informal information, e.g. (S. Taylor – IDE): • Useful to complement quantitative data to untangle causality in analysis for longer-term learning • Useful to feed managers quickly to inform adaptive decision-making

  5. What managers want – content Typical content: • Attitudes, confidence, prejudices, trust, relationships • Proxying for incentives and anticipating behaviour change, within a framework of the goal and pathway towards it

  6. What managers want – characteristics • Ease of Access • Timeliness • Documented in some form (S. Taylor – IDE) • Quick: daily, weekly or monthly • Very specific to field activities • With information user in mind • Ideally in person, next best by phone (C. Duncan – EWB)

  7. A tension: open spaces and direction • A culture of sharing and learning (G. N – CARE) • Open mind; • Curiosity; • Attitude of questioning assumptions • Flexibility • Some direction needed to organise information flow and build that culture (S. Taylor – IDE; A. Morcrette – PA) • More on this later

  8. Incentives to make EK&SO work better (1) • Tension between ‘getting the job done’ and learning is passed down from donor to manager to staff: work with donors to be more learning oriented (RC – ACDI/VOCA) • Changing program office culture away from directed management with incentives for learning: • Learning deliverables in job description and part of performance review • Rewarding learning with exposure internally and externally (RC – ACDI/VOCA)

  9. Incentives to make EK&SO work better (2) • Shaking up the established culture • Hiring staff from less traditional backgrounds (RC – ACDI/VOCA) • Nurturing a learning culture • Strong, flattened feedbacks between managers and field staff (CD – EWB)) • Integrated into day-to-day work (facilitation) (CD – EWB))

  10. Capacity building to make EK&SO work better • ‘Bright spots’ and ‘ninjas’ (S. Taylor – IDE) • Getting staff to shadow experienced or successful colleagues and through mentoring make their implicit methods explicit • Embed observational practices into facilitation capacity building • False distinction between informal monitoring, observational knowledge management and facilitation (C. Pennotti – CARE, A. Morcrette – PA)

  11. Focusing on the important – using results chains

More Related