Title: Monitoring and Evaluation: Concepts and Indicators
 1Monitoring and Evaluation Concepts and Indicators
- Gugsa Yimer 
- ME Officer, Juba
2Objective 
- By the end of the session, participants will be 
 able to
- Explain major concepts in monitoring and 
 evaluation
- Select appropriate indicators for monitoring and 
 evaluation
3Specific Objective
- By the end of the session, participants will be 
 able to
- Be able to define monitoring and evaluation 
- Distinguish between monitoring and evaluation 
- Distinguish between the conventional and 
 participatory methods of project monitoring and
 evaluation
- Distinguish between output, outcome and impact 
 level indicators.
- Select appropriate indicators for measuring 
 outputs and outcomes of their sector
4Outline 
- Definition/Concept 
- Purposes 
- Participatory ME 
- Differences between ME 
- Development / selection of indicator 
- Definition 
- Types of indicators 
- Indicator selection criteria 
- Steps in selecting indicators 
- Monitoring and Evaluation of the Work Plan 
- Sharing ME information
5Monitoring and Evaluation
- Group work (15 minutes) 
- Thoughts about ME 
- What do we mean by monitoring, evaluation 
- What do you think is the difference between 
 monitoring and evaluation?
-  Positive and negative thoughts regarding 
 monitoring and evaluation?
- What are the major reasons for conducting 
 Monitoring and Evaluation
6Monitoring and Evaluation  Introduction 
- Definition 
- Monitoring is a continuous process used to 
 determine the extent to which an intervention or
 a project has been effectively implemented at
 different levels, in time and at what cost.
7Purpose of monitoring
- to achieve the best possible performance by 
 providing feedback to the beneficiaries and the
 management / donors at all levels.
- to improve work plans and to take corrective 
 action in the case of shortfalls and constraints.
 
- to track progress and change that occur over time 
 in inputs, process and outputs by means of
 record-keeping and regular reporting systems.
- help program managers determine which areas 
 /states are in need of greater effort.
- The systematic recording of monitoring findings 
 can later serve as one of the progressive
 evaluation tools of the intervention.
8Monitoring 
- Monitoring should be carried out regularly, for 
 example, monthly, quarterly, etc.
- Data are usually compiled at lower level such as 
 community and county levels and later forwarded
 to states and regions and finally to national
 level.
- The information has to be used at all levels of 
 the system for self assessment and tracking the
 progress and decision.
- Therefore, it is critical that everyone involved 
 be clear about which indicators are being
 monitored, as well as how the information will be
 collected and used.
9EVALUATION 
- Evaluation is a collection of activities designed 
 to determine the value or worth of a specific
 program, intervention or project, i.e., to link a
 particular output or outcome directly to a
 particular intervention.
- It also entails detailed analysis of the 
 effectiveness of the program by calculating the
 extent to which the pre-set objectives and
 targets are achieved.
- Evaluation 
-  to be decided during the initial planning 
 process.
- requires prior planning and may also need the 
 involvement of external evaluators.
- is based on the set of indicators set during the 
 initial planning process.
10Purpose of Evaluation
- The purpose evaluation is to measure the effects/ 
 outcomes and impacts of a program against the
 objectives it set out to accomplish, in order to
 guide decision making during program
 implementation and to improve future programs.
- It helps in determining 
- Whether such projects or activities should be 
 extended for more time in the same geographic
 area
- Whether the same or similar types of activities 
 should be replicated elsewhere
- Whether the project requires major modifications 
 in strategy and approach in order to be effective
 
- What needs to be different in terms of strategy 
 and approach when replicating the project
 elsewhere .
- Participatory Versus Conventional?
11PARTICIPATORY ME
- Participatory ME refers to the process of ME 
 where all project partners  beneficiaries and
 project staff  are involved.
- Instead of having a team of outsiders visit the 
 project to carry out the evaluation, the project
 partners themselves conduct the evaluation.
- If an outsider is involved, her or his role 
 should be to facilitate the process and serve as
 a technical resource.
- In participatory evaluation, all key decisions 
 regarding the evaluation are made by the project
 partners. These include
- Timing, when to carry out the evaluation 
- Process, indicators and analysis 
- Sharing and reporting and using the findings. 
- Participatory ME is most effective when the 
 project design and implementation have also been
 carried out in a participatory manner.
12Difference between Participatory and Conventional 
Monitoring and Evaluation
- There is one key difference between participatory 
 and conventional monitoring and evaluation.
- In the case of participatory ME , community 
 members, that is, the direct beneficiaries of the
 project, play an active role in ME.
- They maintain records at the community level, 
 analyze progress, and use this information to
 make decisions about project implementation.
- The main characteristics of this process are 
 inclusion, collaboration, collective action and
 mutual respect.
- In the conventional ones, monitoring and 
 evaluation is done by staff members and external
 experts to address donor requirement, and
 therefore all monitoring activities are geared
 towards producing reports for the donors.
13USING BOTH CONVENTIONAL AND PARTICIPATORY ME
- Donors who fund organizations will continue to 
 need data to show how their funds have been
 invested in humanitarian and development, and how
 they have contributed to the beneficiaries.
- For the time being, organizations can expect that 
 most donors will include a requirement in grants
 and contracts for the regular submission of
 program and financial reports.
- Its possible to fulfill such a requirement while 
 at the same time meeting the needs of the
 beneficiaries/ communities.
- Participatory and conventional ME can be 
 effectively combined what the donor requires and
 what PME offers are not mutually exclusive.
- The same information collected through a 
 participatory monitoring process can often be
 presented to the donor in a slightly different
 format.
14Difference between ME 
 15Selection of Indicators
- Indicator 
- A marker of performance 
- A key to ME 
- Indicators are milestones or markers that show 
 where we are in an activity, that we are making
 progress, and that we are heading in the right
 direction.
- They also show whether we have achieved our 
 objectives.
- In any project, indicators depend on the 
 projects objectives. While objectives tell us
 what the project plans to achieve, indicators
 tell us how to measure to ascertain if those
 objectives are achieved or not.
16Indicators
- Indicators can be used to monitor the following 
 elements
- Changes over time (e.g.  change in average 
 household income over a period of time)
- Differences between population sub-groups (e.g. 
 Prevalence of malnutrition between males
 females between urban  rural)
- Achievement towards targets (e.g. average food 
 production vis-à-vis initially planned)
17Indicators
- Indicators can be grouped as 
- Population level indicators 
- Program/project level indicators 
- Population level indicators 
- Gathered from representative sample of the target 
 population
- Not necessarily related to a specific project 
 /program, Example
- Average food production per farming household 
- Per capita income 
- Nutritional status of children under 5 
- Program/project level indicators 
- Generated within the project 
- E.g. number of supplies distributed 
- Number of new saving and credit association 
 formed in the last quarter
- No of farmers trained in agriculture extension in 
 the last 1 year, etc
- Note that program level indicators are more 
 useful than population level indicators in
 directly tracking input and out put of a project.
18TYPES OF INDICATORS
- There are four types of indicators generally used 
 in project monitoring and evaluation
- numerical 
- scaling or ranking 
- classifying and, 
- descriptive. 
- Numerical provides exact numbers. Numerical 
 indicators are also called quantitative
 indicators. Examples of numerical indicators are
 
- number of farmers trained 
- Number of animals vaccinated 
- number of tools distributed by type 
- number of malnourished children supported. 
- The data for these indicators are counted. 
19TYPES OF INDICATORS
- Scaling or ranking provide graduated descriptions 
 of assessment. For example, people can rank
 satisfaction with services on a scale of 1 to 4,
 where 4 is highly satisfied and 1 is not
 satisfied at all.
- Classifying provides answers in categories Yes 
 or No Male or Female Orthodox or Catholic or
 Muslim or Protestant.
- Descriptive indicators are qualitative because 
 they describe the state of something in words.
 Examples of descriptive indicators are the
 inheritance rights of women are fulfilled.
20WHAT MAKES A GOOD INDICATOR?
- A good indicator clearly demonstrates the 
 expected progress or result. It measures the
 intended change as accurately as possible. It is
 clearly defined, easily understood and easily
 measured.
- For example, in an nutrition project, the 
 objective is to provide 500 malnourished children
 with nutritional supplements.
- One indicator that measures the success of this 
 objective is to count the actual number of
 children provided with nutritional supplements.
- Number of malnourished children provided with 
 nutritional supplements is a simple and
 straightforward indicator.
- Sometimes we have to use indirect indicators, 
 which are also called proxy indicators, to
 measure change.
- E.g., in a project aiming to reduce stigma 
 affecting AIDS orphans it is difficult to
 identify direct indicator, - stigma is complex
 and manifests itself in various forms.
- Use indirect indicators to measure it 
- Some proxy indicators for community-level stigma 
 reduction
- number of AIDS orphans being hosted in extended 
 family households
- Number people who are willing to kiss HIV 
 positive people for greetings
21Rules of thumb in selecting indicators
- Review objectives carefully. Try to understand 
 exactly what they are saying.
- Avoid formulating objectives in a broad manner 
 such objectives are not clear and make it
 difficult to identify indicators for monitoring
 and evaluation purposes.
- For example, Agricultural growth through 
 diversification is a broad objective.
- Use specifics of the projects intentions in the 
 objective such as Provide agricultural inputs to
 ____ HHs in village XYZ about to increase
 productivity.
- That can lead to specific indicators such as 
 Number of HHs who received agricultural inputs
 Percent of HHs who received agricultural input
 reporting an increase in production. Also define
 project beneficiaries for example, is it the
 entire village, or selected families or
 individuals?
- Be clear about what type of change is implied. 
 What does the project expect to change?
 Knowledge, attitudes, practice, laws or policies.
- And at what level? Individual, household, group, 
 community.
22Rules of thumb in selecting indicators
- It is important to define the indicators clearly 
 at the very beginning.
- While numerical indicators are easy to adapt, 
 count and report, they are not necessarily the
 most useful and meaningful indicators.
- Indicators that will be monitored over a period 
 of time need to remain relatively stable over
 time.
- Make sure that the indicators you choose are 
 practical for data which can be collected on a
 regular basis.
- The data should be collected at a reasonable cost 
 and in reasonable time.
23Selection/Construction of Indicators
- People who design projects will develop 
 monitoring plans and indicators.
- In PME, the community and the implementing 
 organization select the indicators together, with
 input from the donor, and conduct monitoring.
- Selecting indicators and setting targets 
- is usually done during the process of program 
 planning,
- in a participatory way with communities and key 
 stakeholders.
- should also include information from similar 
 types of interventions, so that the targets set
 are realistic from the perspective of the target
 population, resource allocation, and intervention
 type.
- In addition to the community and the implementing 
 organizations, donors also select indicators,
 based on what they need to know about the
 projects outcome.
24-  Monitoring 
 Evaluation
-  Process 
 Effectiveness
INPUT
OUTPUT
 ALL 
MOST
OUTCOME
IMPACT
 SOME 
No. of projects
 FEW 
Long-term
Short/medium term
Level of evaluation efforts 
 25-  Monitoring 
 Evaluation
-  Process Effectiveness
INPUT
OUTPUT
 ALL 
MOST
OUTCOME
IMPACT
 SOME 
 FEW 
No. of projects
Knowledge change Increase in production as a 
 Result of agri. Input supply Behavioral change 
Increase in per capita income Child 
Mortality Maternal mortality
Resource Staff Funds Facilities Supplies
No of farmers trained Trained staff Agri. Inputs 
provided 
Level of evaluation efforts 
 26Example of indicators by input  output framework 
 27Steps in selecting indicators
- Selecting appropriate and useful indicators is a 
 fairly straightforward process, but requires
 careful thought, collaboration, and consensus
 building.
- Although these steps are presented as discrete 
 steps, in practice some of these can be
 effectively undertaken simultaneously.
28Step 1 Clarify the results statements
- Good indicators start with good results 
 statements or objective that people can
 understand and agree on. For each result
 statement
- Carefully consider the result desired/ objective 
 
- Avoid overly broad result statements/ objectives 
 
- Be clear about what type of change is implied 
- Identify more precisely the specific target for 
 change
- Study the activities and strategies directed at 
 achieving the change.
29Step 2 Develop a list of possible indicators
-  There are usually many possible indicators for 
 any desired outcome/objective, but some are more
 appropriate and useful than others. Start by
 creating an initial list of possible indicators,
 tapping the following sources
- Internal brainstorming by the project team and 
 other stakeholders
- Consultations with experts in the substantive 
 program area and
- Experience of other operating units with similar 
 indicators.
- The key to creating a useful initial list of 
 indicators is to be inclusive.
30Step 3 Assess each possible indicator
- When assessing and comparing possible indicators, 
 the following seven criteria may be helpful
- Direct Indicator should measure as closely as 
 possible the result/objective it is intended to
 measure. If using a direct measure is not
 possible, proxy indicators might be appropriate.
- Objective An objective indicator has no 
 ambiguity about what is intended to measure. That
 is, there is general agreement over
 interpretation of the results.
- Adequate An indicator and its companion 
 indicators should adequately measure the
 objective / result in question. The number of
 indicators needed to measure any given result/
 objective, depends on the complexity of the
 result being measured, the level of resources
 available for monitoring performance, and the
 amount of information needed to make reasonably
 confident decisions.
31Step 3 Assess each possible indicator
- Quantitative (where possible) Quantitative 
 indicators are not necessarily more objective,
 however, their numerical precision lends them to
 more agreement on interpretation of results data,
 and are thus usually preferable.
- Disaggregated when data are disaggregated by 
 gender, age, location, or some other dimensions,
 they help track whether or not specific groups
 participate in or benefit from activities
 intended to include them.
- Practical An indicator is practical if data can 
 be obtained in a timely way and at a reasonable
 cost. Managers require data that can be collected
 frequently enough to inform them of progress and
 influence decisions.
- Reliable Data obtained should be of sufficiently 
 reliable quality for confident decision-making.
32Step 4 Select the best indicators 
- The last step is to narrow the list to the final 
 indicators that will be used in the monitoring
 system. The indicators selected should be the
 optimum set that meets the information needs of
 management, at a reasonable cost.
- Remember 
- Limit the number of indicators 
- Identify the type of data collection needed for 
 each indicator
- Priorities by importance and ease of collection 
- Group selected indicators by source of data 
- Decide on what the project is able to do given 
 the resource available
33Monitoring and Evaluation of the Work Plan 
- Sector plans 
- Sector Objectives 
- SMART 
- Link between Project sheets and sector plans 
- Indicators 
- Direct, objective, adequate, practical. ? 
- Beneficiaries  clearly stated
34Monitoring and Evaluation of the Work Plan 
- Project Sheets 
- Project Objectives 
- SMART 
- Link between Project sheets and sector plans 
- Targets/Indicators 
- Direct, objective, adequate, practical? 
- Link between Project sheet and sector plan 
 indicators
- Beneficiaries  clearly stated
35Sharing monitoring information 
- Once the monitoring report is ready, it should be 
 shared with all project staff so that progress
 can be reviewed with concrete evidence.
- Most projects hold monthly review meetings, and 
 are conducted in two steps.
- The first review meeting is held with project 
 staff.
- The monitoring information is discussed at this 
 meeting and decisions at a project level are
 taken.
- The second meeting is held with representatives 
 from the communities, so that they also get a
 chance to review progress and present their
 views.
- This provides an opportunity to take joint 
 decisions for community-level activity.
- Report will be also shared with higher level 
 managers
36- Format for comparing actual performance with 
 standard/planned outputs - Example
37Group work 
- 3 groups (30 Minutes) 
- Based on the indicator selection criteria, 
 examine the indicators of Food Security and
 Livelihood Sector of South Sudan (Work Plan 2006)
- Select key indicators from the list (You can 
 modify indicators listed)
- Present to the plenary 
- Thank You