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OECD/INFE High-level Principles for the evaluation of financial education programmes

OECD/INFE High-level Principles for the evaluation of financial education programmes. Adele Atkinson, PhD OECD. With the support of the Russian/World Bank/OECD Trust Fund. Outline . T erminology Motivation for focusing on evaluation The OECD/INFE High-level Principles

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OECD/INFE High-level Principles for the evaluation of financial education programmes

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  1. OECD/INFE High-level Principles for the evaluation of financial education programmes Adele Atkinson, PhD OECD With the support of the Russian/World Bank/OECD Trust Fund

  2. Outline • Terminology • Motivation for focusing on evaluation • The OECD/INFE High-level Principles • Other OECD/INFE tools developed under the Trust Fund

  3. Terminology Monitoring and Evaluating financial education programmes: what do we mean? • Checking whether programme targets were met by monitoring inputs and outputs • Keeping track of the day-to-day inputs and processes involved in delivering the education • Assessing the outcomes and impact for participants • Potentially, also analysing the cost-effectiveness of the programme

  4. Motivation for focusing on evaluation

  5. The challenges faced • 46 Authorities from 29 countries responded to an OECD/INFE request for information about the extent to which they were evaluating and the challenges they faced; 28 authorities in 23 countries had evaluated The most frequently faced challenges:

  6. OECD INFE High-level Principles 3 steps : planning, implementation, reporting 5 key principles (discussed in following slides): • New programmes should be evaluated; try to also evaluate existing programmes • Include evaluation in the budget • Evaluation should be credible: consider an external evaluator or reviewer • Design the evaluation in accordance with the objectives and type of programme • Report what worked, and what didn’t work

  7. 1. Programmes should be evaluated FE Programmes planning should include evaluation New programmes: • Develop a strategy for monitoring and evaluating alongside programme design • Keep in mind the benefit of collecting information before the programme start All programmes: • Encourage dialogue and collaboration with key stakeholders to ensure clarity and consistency of aims and objectives • Reassure providers that evaluation is not designed to judge them, but to improve efficiency if appropriate and to identify successful programmes

  8. 2. Include evaluation in the overall budget A good evaluation ensures that resources are being well spent: it is a wise expense! How much money do you include for evaluation?: • Find out how much other evaluations have cost and gather estimates before finalising the programme budget Managing the evaluation budget: • When limited funds are available prioritise certain aspects of evaluation • Look for ways of reducing costs: e.g. sharing questionnaires, drawing on existing data and international methodology and drawing on contacts; piloting programmes before large scale roll-out

  9. 3. Evaluation should be credible External evaluators bring skills and independence Credibility can also be improved through: The use of technology • Administrative systems and websites can provide objective data. • Electronic games can store scores and be used to measure improvement over time. Well designed instruments: • Survey, test, interview or focus group questions should be based on good-practices Corroboration of the findings through analysis of other sources of data, such as pension fund records, credit counselling services etc

  10. 4. Appropriate evaluation design Continuous monitoring: • Count/measure/quantify- how many participants, hours of contact, leaflets distributed etc Measure change according to programme type and objectives: • Monitor improved awareness, evaluate behaviour change strategies, test knowledge Identify ways of attributing change: • create a control group- lottery for places, random marketing of courses– according to programme design. Undertake comparisons of: • knowledge, behaviour, attitudes before vs. after – and long after; participants vs. non-participants; targets vs. achievements; budget vs. expenditure, opinions of providers vs. users

  11. 5. Reporting Reporting is critical for the future of FE programmes Avoid over generalisation • get advice on whether findings may apply more widely Report the method and limitations of the evaluation Disseminate the findings widely • use different styles of reporting (newsletter, academic paper..) • Draw on the findings when making future funding decisions & designing future programmes • Compareyour results to those of other programmes

  12. Evaluation research and tools

  13. Questions, comments, further information: adele.atkinson@oecd.org OECD/INFE www.financial-education.org Russian Trust Fund www.finlitedu.org

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