Title: Develop teams and individuals BSBLED401A
1Develop teams and individuals BSBLED401A
- By
- Yuwaluck Pongkasemsombut
- ID C62152
2Individual learning plans
- Based on scenario of Sherman Pty Ltd is a
multinational organization operating at the
Information Technology market and its sales
department has been recently experiencing some
problems affecting its outcomes. It appears that
the team members work as individualists, they are
not cooperating with each other and they are not
working effectively as a team. We should learn
about how to develop a learning plan for
individuals and team learning plan. - We will start about how a learner will get from
their starting point on a learning journey to the
desired end point. They may be for one course and
include the acquisition of qualifications and
skills, or may link several courses that give
progression to different levels (from level 1 to
3, or from level 2 to Higher Education). They
should be individual for each learner to reflect
aspirations, aptitude and needs. - Although there may be common learning goals and
methods of delivery for all learners on a
particular course, it is unlikely that all
learners have exactly the same learning styles,
abilities, support needs, access to assessment in
the workplace (if applicable), previous
qualifications or experience. Too many
vocationally-based courses have identical
individual learning plans where only the names of
learners are different. Some will struggle to
achieve them while others will find them too easy
and lose interest by not being sufficiently
challenged.
3Individual learning plans (cont.)
- Individual learning plans should start from a
common format, listing general outcomes, and then
develop as initial assessment and circumstances
impact. They should be live documents that are
useful to the learner, delivery staff and
possibly employers . How does the way you use
individual learning plans to support your
learners compare with that of the most effective
provision seen on inspection? The following
strengths and areas for improvement have been
taken from recent inspection reports. - Common inspection strengths
- Effective use of individual learning plans
- Good individual learning plans
- Good development of individual learning plans
- Common inspection areas for improvement
- Poor development of individual learning plans
- Inadequate use of individual learning plans
- Poor planning of learning
4Individual learning plans (cont.)
- Particularly effective practice identified in
inspections includes - Developing a proforma for an individual learning
plan that does not just meet the needs of funding
bodies but covers all the elements required for a
programme of learning. The development of the
best proformas has taken into account the need to
provide sufficient space for updating them. - Not completing individual learning plans in a
rush to meet funding body requirements
(inspectors still see the individual learning
plan being completed and signed off in induction
before initial assessment is fully completed so
that a copy can be sent to the funding body). - Examples of developing a second individual
learning plan as a 'working document' used
throughout the time a learner is with the
provider, that is focused on delivery of
learning, assessment, support and target setting. - Delivery staff receiving training in order to
understand the results of initial assessment,
such as literacy, numeracy or language
requirements, and their impact on learning. This
includes other learner support needs such as
dyslexia, to ensure that the individual learning
plan reflects support, assessment arrangements
and possible need for extra time.
5Individual learning plans (cont.)
- Taking account of previous experience and
learning, so that targets and times to gain
assessments in an area in which learners have
previous experience are realistic and do not hold
the progress of learners up. Plans are individual
in developing targets that stretch learners and
keep them focused on achieving realistic
milestones. - Ensuring that each learner has an individual
learning plan, based on their initial assessment
and mapping the route from that starting point to
the achievement of individual goals, for example
completing the full framework, or gaining
sustainable employment. - Involving the learner in creating the first draft
of their learning plan, understanding the reason
for its contents and updating the plan with the
learner (and employer if applicable) as training
progresses and circumstances change. - Using the learning plan as a working document by
checking progress against it during reviews or
tutorial activities, amending target dates for
milestones such as achievement of units, key
skills or other qualifications as necessary. - Planning in more detail for the short term
targets and in outline for the longer term
targets.
6Individual learning plans (cont.)
- Using the individual learning plan to record how
any additional support needs, identified by
initial assessment, are to be provided for. This
helps keep everyone involved in training in the
'loop' and helps eliminate support being given in
isolation from the main training programme. - There are several examples of work-based
providers having targets that reflect particular
types of 'model learner', for example ones who
have previous experience or qualifications, or
those with additional support needs. These act as
a preliminary guide in setting targets which can
then be altered as the learner progresses. - Some providers have altered individual learning
plans to facilitate 'fast tracking' of learners,
for example where emigration or pregnancy might
prevent completion. - Some providers with good information technology
resources have made individual learning plans
available online, which can be updated. Sections
can be printed for reference where access to
computers is limited. - Quality improvement systems such as internal
audit and review focusing on how well plans are
completed and how they may be improved in the
future. Good practice is noted and shared across
the provider.
7Learning and Development Plan
- Learning and Development Policy
- through an effective learning and development
plan consistent with the principles of employment
equity, it will encourage and assist all
employees to - Acquire the knowledge and skills required to
maximize their performance in their current
positions - Acquire new competencies in response to, or in
preparation for, changing job requirements or new
job opportunities - Develop or redirect their careers as individual
or organizational needs change - Acquire knowledge and understanding respecting
issues of fairness, equity, and human rights. - Learning and development are shared
responsibilities, and all employees are
responsible for contributing to this undertaking.
All decisions to engage in learning must be the
product of discussion between the employee and
the employee's supervisor
8Learning and Development Plan (cont.)
- Learning and Development Action Plan
- It is understood that various elements of this
plan will require further consultation, referral
and planning with existing university units that
will be responsible for program delivery. For
example - Academic Computing Services
- Continuing Studies
- Employment Equity
- Financial Services
- Human Resources
- Occupational Health and Safety
- For each goal set out in the Policy, a number of
actions are defined below and the initial
responsibility for each action is attributed to
individuals or bodies.
9How to Interview Potential Employees
- As your business grows, you will eventually find
the need to hire employees. Having a good
employee can be a valuable asset to your
business, one which will allow your business to
grow and profit. However, hiring the wrong
employee can lead to disaster. - The most important part of hiring an employee is
the interview process. The questions you ask and
the responses you are given are often the most
important factor in determining if an individual
is good for your company. Once you have a handful
of prospects, its time to begin the interview
process. For some people this is a difficult
task. - When you first meet the prospect and shake their
hand, you will get a good idea of how confident
they are. You want an employee who is confident,
and can work well under pressure. Try to avoid
asking questions which can be answered with a
simple "no" or "yes". Ask questions which will
force the person to go into details about
themselves and their abilities. You don't want
planned responses. You want real answers. - Ask them questions about what type of supervisor
makes them work hard, or what would be the
perfect job for them. Find out how they manage
their time, and where they plan on being five or
ten years from now. These are powerful questions
which will force them to give real answers,
answers that will give you a solid of idea of
whether or not they would be good for your
company
10How to Interview Potential Employees (cont.)
- One of the most important things you should want
to know is why they want to work for you. What
qualities does your business have which attracted
them? These are also good questions which will
determine if they are a good candidate. If they
seem to hesitate to talk about certain things,
this is often a bad sign. You also want to be
wary of candidates who say terrible things about
their former employers. You want to look for
employees who will ask you questions. Someone who
asks questions about their employer shows that
they can think for themselves, and this is the
type of person you should want working for you.
You don't want an employee you have to
micromanage. When the interview comes to a
conclusion, tell them when they can expect to
hear from you. - Hiring employees are one of the most important
factors in the success or failure of your
business. You want to work with people who you
know will enhance your business, and who can
think independently.
11Questions You May Use
- What five adjectives describe you best?
- Why should I consider you for this position?
- Why are you the best candidate for this position?
- Tell me about the one thing in your life you're
proudest of. - You've changed jobs frequently. What makes you
think that this position will be different? - What qualities do you think are necessary to make
a success of this job? - Describe your ideal job.
- How did you find out about this job?
- What do you know about the job?
- What do you know about the UTSA/this department?
12Questions You May Use (cont.)
- Is there anything that will prevent you from
getting to work on time? - Is there anything that will prevent you from
working the jobs regular hours? - What kinds of work interest you the most?
- What interests you most about this position?
- How do you feel about your present workload?
- What motivates you to do your best work?
- How can we best help you get your job done?
- Tell me about a time you went out on a limb to
get the job done. - What are the disadvantages of this line of work?
- What do you find most frustrating at work?
13Questions You May Use (cont.)
- Tell me about a project that got you really
excited. - How do you define doing a good job?
- What makes a job enjoyable for you?
- Under what conditions do you work best?
- What is your greatest strength/weakness or
deficiency? - Tell me about a work task you enjoy.
- Tell me about your last position and what you
did. - Tell me about the last time you made a mistake
and how you corrected it. - If you don't leave your current job, what will
happen there? How far can you advance? - Of all the work you have done, where have you
been most successful?
14Questions You May Use (cont.)
- What types of office equipment have you used?
- Tell me about the types of word processing you
did on your last job. - What would you say are the major technical skills
needed for this position? - How do you merge a file in Microsoft Word?
- What certifications/classes have you completed
this last year? Were any of them required by your
supervisor? - Describe the types of documents you deal with on
a daily basis. - What software programs do you use most often in
your current position? - Describe in detail your experience with computer
software programs. - Give me an example of a technical problem you had
to solve. How did you implement the solution? - Tell me about the PowerPoint presentations you
have developed.
15team learning plan.
- Information on Team Learning Plan (TLP)
- The Team Learning Plan (TLP) is developed
following a thorough assessment of team skills
and knowledge relative to its current and
prospective requirements. The Team Learning Plan
governs and subsumes Individual Learning Plans,
and designates team learning and development
priorities and strategies. The Team Learning Plan
highlights that team member learning and
development is a team responsibility, not a
private affair between individuals and their
supervisor. - Learning options for you and your team
- Learning Solutions can assist you to identify and
meet the development needs of your team. Your
learning advisor will work with you to design a
customised learning solution to support you and
your team and to assist you in meeting your
goals.
16Learning options
- We can tailor programs for teams who are
- undergoing restructures or change initiatives
- working to define their vision, values and key
behaviours - developing a strategic plan
- seeking to improve communication and engagement
- needing to improve efficiency and responsiveness
to internal and external clients - building a new team or introducing a new leader
to the team - Our solutions can include
- facilitation of strategic planning sessions
- customised versions of courses run in Learning
Solutions open program - programs designed to meet specific needs
particularly in the area of building effective
teams - assistance to establish mentoring programs
17teams performance
- Its important to understand that team members
want regular feedback on their performance. The
formal performance review is an important
component but it shouldnt be the only one. Mind
you, many firms also struggle to conduct the
formal performance review effectively. What is
needed is a mechanism where team members receive
quality feedback throughout the year.
Personally, - Due to the heavy, unrelenting workload associated
with tax and accounting compliance, when a job is
completed most firms do not conduct any review of
how well the job was done and what could be done
in the future to improve. The tendency is to run
straight to the next job. - Instead, why dont you take 10 minutes at the end
of each job and sit down with the team member who
did the work and conduct a quick review - What did we do well? This is the chance to
provide positive feedback to the team member. - What didnt we do well? This is a chance to
provide some constructive feedback as to how the
team member could improve. Mind you the answer to
this question might also be that the reviewer
needs to improve their performance !!
18teams performance
- How can we do the job better next year? For
example are there some processes we need to
improve? - How might we get the client better organised in
the future so that we can do the work more
efficiently? - What should be the time budget for this job next
year? Its much easier to set the time budget
when the work is fresh in your mind. - You could also give the job a mark of 10. What
do you think would be the reaction of a team
member if their job received a mark of 6 out of
10? Most, I think, would ask what they need to do
to get a 7 or and 8. This provides a focus on how
we can improve. Some firms are starting to use
these scores as a way of assessing performance to
assist in promotion assessments and salary
review. - Of course the result of these reviews will often
be some actions such as reviewing some processes,
conducting some training, communicating with the
client. A system will need to be implemented to
ensure these actions are not lost. - The end result is better feedback to team members
with the added benefit of work being organised
more effectively in a future.
19training and other development
- Key points
- In general staff felt that although there was in
theory a commitment to training in higher
education, the institutions they worked for had
very little to offer in terms of staff
development and career progression. - Few staff had received formal training despite
the changes to their work roles. - New professional staff were more likely to feel
that their training needs were taken seriously
than other staff. But this tended to be an
advantage only in the short term. - Most staff experienced practical obstacles to
obtaining the training they felt they needed. - The biggest obstacles were reduced funding for
training, spending priorities and the lack of
time to undertake training. - Further qualifications several members of staff
were studying for further qualifications which
they did largely in their own time and at their
own expense. - The majority were working towards an academic
rather than a vocational qualification although
they were not working in academic-related posts. - They did this because they felt that academics
lacked respect for vocational qualifications and
would not take them seriously without academic
qualifications.
20training and other development (cont.)
- Staff development most administrative and
support staff did not feel that their
institutions were committed to staff development. - 'Pre-1992 universities' often did not have
appraisal procedures for administrative and
support staff. - Staff in '1992 universities', where appraisal
procedures were more advanced, often experienced
a tension between the increased expectations
generated by appraisal and the opportunities
available to fulfil them. - Again, new professionals had more positive
experiences of appraisal and opportunities for
staff development. - Career progression staff expressed most
frustration over their opportunities for career
progression within higher education. - The majority felt that they had no opportunities
for progression at all. - They identified the structure of higher education
and lack of funding as the major constraints on
their career progression. - Many believed that the only way to progress was
to move between higher education institutions or
to look outside the sector.
21training and other development (cont.)
- Opportunities for training
- The administrative and support staff reported
markedly similar experiences in terms of their
opportunities for training. However, some
distinctions between staff were apparent. The new
professionals reported slightly more favourable
experiences of training provision than the
niche-finders or subject specialists. The new
professionals had experienced a stronger
commitment to their training than other staff.
None of them had actually been offered training
but when they had identified their training
needs, their managers had been very supportive.
One explained - '... when I was appointed... I was offered no
training at all through the university, so it was
up to me to go and find it, which I did. But then
they paid for it... they were fine.' - Overall new professionals had encountered fewer
obstacles to obtaining training and were less
likely than other staff to have had requests for
training refused. This was probably because they
were working in newly created or rapidly
expanding posts which were viewed favourably and
were perceived as making an important
contribution to higher education. As a
consequence, managers viewed the provision of
training for these posts as a sensible investment
rather than a drain on resources.
22training and other development (cont.)
- Nevertheless, this distinction did not work
across the board. Better access to training was
short-lived, even for new professionals. One or
two new professionals who had been in post for
more than two or three years and whose posts were
more firmly established, clearly found themselves
facing similar obstacles to the niche-finders and
subject specialists. It is likely that providing
a favourable training environment for some new
professionals was a pragmatic response to ensure
that the new growth areas of higher education,
which were generally the focus of management
scrutiny, could be developed to their fullest
capacity. Once this had been achieved and the
preoccupation of managers had shifted, new
professionals faced the same training environment
as other administrative and support staff. - Obstacles in training provision
- The majority of the administrative and support
staff, however, reported a number of practical
obstacles in relation to training. Most had
received little training in recent years. More
important, very few felt they had received the
amount of training they needed to keep on top of
their work. They perceived this lack of training
to be particularly problematic given the rate of
change they were experiencing in their jobs and
the increased responsibilities many had taken on.
These problems affected the vast majority of
staff regardless of their area of work or
institution type.
23training and other development (cont.)
- Funding for training had become increasingly
constrained and was reportedly the biggest
obstacle in accessing training. A junior member
of technical support staff said - '... we are encouraged to go, but I want to do a
computer technicians' course, and the cost is so
high for the department... There is encouragement
to do it provided it doesn't cost too much.' - Staff were finding it more and more difficult to
attend externally run training courses which were
usually more expensive than university-run
courses. They were unable to attend external
courses where equivalent internal courses were
available. Yet, they felt that internal courses
were often not run to the same standard as
training courses in the private sector. In
addition, some staff had to wait for long periods
for cheaper alternatives to become available. And
several staff had experienced problems in gaining
access to oversubscribed internal training
courses. - This was especially problematic for technical and
computing support staff. Many of the courses they
wanted to attend were particularly expensive
because of the IT-intensive nature of their
training needs. A member of computing support
staff explained
24training and other development (cont.)
- 'I think it's very difficult for us to justify
commercial courses, costing over a thousand
pounds for a few days, even though they're
better courses..It's mainly when there's a
university running them which are nice and
cheap.' - Yet the training needs of computing and support
staff were often so specialised that it was not
cost-effective to organise internal courses.
These staff were acutely aware that they had lost
touch with many developments in their field. - Several staff expressed the view that the
training needs of administrative and support
staff lacked recognition compared to other staff
working in higher education. They believed that
when training budgets were tight, training in
management, research and academic skills was
given priority over training in administrative
and support functions. This was a particular
problem for staff who worked in institutions
where training budgets have been devolved to
department level. These staff spoke of a
'Cinderella effect', whereby they came at the
bottom of the list when training budgets were
allocated and so were often forgotten. They also
believed that their managers knew too little
about their area of work to make informed
decisions about their training needs.
25training and other development (cont.)
- Training for qualifications
- Given that the staff who took part in the group
discussions were working in educational
institutions it is not surprising that a large
proportion of them were studying towards further
qualifications. This group largely comprised
technical support staff or administrators who
came into most contact with academic staff.
Computing support staff and librarians tended to
be more concerned with keeping up with
technological developments in their fields. - The staff studying for a qualification reported
that they received financial or intellectual
support from their institutions only if their
courses were considered to be directly of benefit
to their department. As a result, most were
self-financing and were studying outside their
workplace. Some administrative and support staff,
particularly the longer-serving staff, expressed
surprise and discontent over the requirement for
value for money in supporting training for
qualifications. They expressed a general belief
that universities should support 'learning for
its own sake'. They felt that supporting training
purely on a value-for-money basis was contrary to
the aims and objectives of higher education.
26Monitoring and Evaluation
- What is monitoring and evaluation?
- Although the term monitoring and evaluation
tends to get run together as if it is only one
thing, monitoring and evaluation are, in fact,
two distinct sets of organisational activities,
related but not identical. - Monitoring is the systematic collection and
analysis of information as a project progresses. - It is aimed at improving the efficiency and
effectiveness of a project or organisation. It is
based on targets set and activities planned
during the planning phases of work. It helps to
keep the work on track, and can let management
know when things are going wrong. If done
properly, it is an invaluable tool for good
management, and it provides a useful base for
evaluation. It enables you to determine whether
the resources you have available are sufficient
and are being well used, whether the capacity you
have is sufficient and appropriate, and whether
you are doing what you planned to do.
27Monitoring and Evaluation (cont.)
- Evaluation is the comparison of actual project
impacts against the agreed strategic plans. - It looks at what you set out to do, at what you
have accomplished, and how you accomplished it.
It can be formative (taking place during the life
of a project or organisation, with the intention
of improving the strategy or way of functioning
of the project or organisation). It can also be
summative (drawing learning from a completed
project or an organisation that is no longer
functioning). Someone once described this as the
difference between a check-up and an autopsy! - What monitoring and evaluation have in common is
that they are geared towards learning - from what you are doing and how you are doing it,
by focusing on - Efficiency
- Effectiveness
- Impact
28Monitoring and Evaluation (cont.)
- Efficiency tells you that the input into the work
is appropriate in terms of the output. This could
be input in terms of money, time, staff,
equipment and so on. When you run a project and
are concerned about its replicability or about
going to scale, then it is very important to get
the efficiency element right. - Effectiveness is a measure of the extent to which
a development programme or projectachieves the
specific objectives it set. If, for example, we
set out to improve the qualifications of all the
high school teachers in a particular area, did we
succeed? - Impact tells you whether or not what you did made
a difference to the problem situation you were
trying to address. In other words, was your
strategy useful? Did ensuring that teachers were
better qualified improve the pass rate in the
final year of school? Before you decide to get
bigger, or to replicate the project elsewhere,
you need to be sure that what you are doing makes
sense in terms of the impact you want to achieve. - From this it should be clear that monitoring and
evaluation are best done when there has been
proper planning against which to assess progress
and achievements. There are three toolkits in
this set that deal with planning the overview
of planning, strategic planning and action
planning.
29Monitoring and Evaluation (cont.)
- WHY DO MONITORING AND EVALUATION?
- Monitoring and evaluation enable you to check the
bottom line (see Glossary of Terms) of
development work Not are we making a profit?
but are we making a difference? Through
monitoring and evaluation, you can - Review progress
- Identify problems in planning and/or
implementation - Make adjustments so that you are more likely to
make a difference. - In many organisations, monitoring and
evaluation is something that that is seen as a
donor requirement rather than a management tool.
Donors are certainly entitled to know whether
their money is being properly spent, and whether
it is being well spent. But the primary (most
important) use of monitoring and evaluation
should be for the organisation or project itself
to see how it is doing against objectives,
whether it is having an impact, whether it is
working efficiently, and to learn how to do it
better.
30Monitoring and Evaluation (cont.)
- Plans are essential but they are not set in
concrete (totally fixed). If they are not
working, or if the circumstances change, then
plans need to change too. Monitoring and
evaluation are both tools which help a project or
organisation know when plans are not working, and
when circumstances have changed. They give
management the information it needs to make
decisions about the project or organisation,
about changes that are necessary in strategy or
plans. Through this, the constants remain the
pillars of the strategic framework the problem
analysis, the vision, and the values of the
project or organisation. Everything else is
negotiable. (See also the toolkit on strategic
planning) Getting something wrong is not a crime.
Failing to learn from past mistakes because you
are not monitoring and evaluating, is. - Monitoring and evaluation can
- Help you identify problems and their causes
- Suggest possible solutions to problems
- Raise questions about assumptions and strategy
- Push you to reflect on where you are going and
how you are getting there
31Monitoring and Evaluation (cont.)
- Provide you with information and insight
- Encourage you to act on the information and
insight - Increase the likelihood that you will make a
positive development difference. - MORE ABOUT MONITORING AND EVALUATION
- Monitoring involves
- Establishing indicators (See Glossary of Terms)
of efficiency, effectiveness and impact - Setting up systems to collect information
relating to these indicators - Collecting and recording the information
- Analysing the information
- Using the information to inform day-to-day
management. - Monitoring is an internal function in any project
or organisation.
32Monitoring and Evaluation (cont.)
- Evaluation involves
- Looking at what the project or organisation
intended to achieve what difference did it want
to make? What impact did it want to make? - Assessing its progress towards what it wanted to
achieve, its impact targets. - Looking at the strategy of the project or
organisation. Did it have a strategy? Was it
effective in following its strategy? Did the
strategy work? If not, why not? - Looking at how it worked. Was there an efficient
use of resources? What were the opportunity costs
of the way it chose to work? How sustainable is
the way in which the project or organisation
works? What are the implications for the various
stakeholders in the way the organisation works. - Planning for monitoring and evaluation
- Monitoring and evaluation should be part of your
planning process. It is very difficult to go back
and set up monitoring and evaluation systems once
things have begun to happen. You need to begin
gathering information about performance and in
relation to targets from the word go. The first
information gathering should, in fact,
33Planning for monitoring and evaluation
- take place when you do your needs assessment.
This will give you the information you need
against which to assess improvements over time. - When you do your planning process, you will set
indicators. These indicators provide the
framework for your monitoring and evaluation
system. They tell you what you want to know and
the kinds of information it will be useful to
collect. In this section we look at - What do we want to know? This includes looking at
indicators for both internal issues and external
issues. - Different kinds of information.
- How will we get information?
- Who should be involved?
34WHAT DO WE WANT TO KNOW?
- What we want to know is linked to what we think
is important. In development work, what we think
is important is linked to our values. - Most work in civil society organisations is
underpinned by a value framework. It is this
framework that determines the standards of
acceptability in the work we do. The central
values on which most development work is built
are - Serving the disadvantaged
- Empowering the disadvantaged
- Changing society, not just helping individuals
- Sustainability
- Efficient use of resources.
- So, the first thing we need to know is Is what
we are doing and how we are doing it meeting the
requirements of these values? In order to answer
this question, our monitoring and evaluation
system must give us information about
35WHAT DO WE WANT TO KNOW? (cont.)
- Who is benefiting from what we do? How much are
they benefiting? - Are beneficiaries passive recipients or does the
process enable them to have some control over
their lives? - Are there lessons in what we are doing that have
a broader impact than just what is happening on
our project? - Can what we are doing be sustained in some way
for the long-term, or will the impact of our work
cease when we leave? - Are we getting optimum outputs for the least
possible amount of inputs? - DIFFERENT KINDS OF INFORMATION QUANTITATIVE AND
QUALITATIVE - Information used in monitoring and evaluation can
be classified as - Quantitative or
- Qualitative.
36DIFFERENT KINDS OF INFORMATION
- Qualitative measurement tells you how people feel
about a situation or about how things are done or
how people behave. So, for example, although you
might discover that 50 of the teachers in a
school are unhappy about the assessment criteria
used, this is still qualitative information, not
quantitative information. You get qualitative
information by asking, observing, interpreting. - Some people find quantitative information
comforting it seems solid and reliable and
objective. They find qualitative information
unconvincing and subjective. It is a mistake to
say that quantitative information speaks for
itself. It requires just as much interpretation
in order to make it meaningful as does
qualitative information. It may be a fact that
enrolment of girls at schools in some developing
countries is dropping counting can tell us
that, but it tells us nothing about why this drop
is taking place. In order to know that, you would
need to go out and ask questions to get
qualitative information. Choice of indicators is
also subjective, whether you use quantitative or
qualitative methods to do the actual measuring.
Researchers choose to measure school enrolment
figures for girls because they believe that this
tells them something about how women in a society
are treated or viewed.
37HOW WILL WE GET INFORMATION?
- The monitoring and evaluation process requires a
combination of quantitative and qualitative
information in order to be comprehensive. For
example, we need to know what the school
enrolment figures for girls are, as well as why
parents do or do not send their children to
school. Perhaps enrolment figures are higher for
boys than for girls because a particular
community sees schooling as a luxury and prefers
to train boys to do traditional and practical
tasks such taking care of animals. In this case,
the higher enrolment of girls does not
necessarily indicate higher regard for girls. - HOW WILL WE GET INFORMATION?
- This is dealt with in some detail in the toolkit
on action planning, in the section on monitoring,
collecting information as you go along. Your
methods for information collecting need to be
built into your action planning. You should be
aiming to have a steady stream of information
flowing into the project or organisation about
the work and how it is done, without overloading
anyone. The information you collect must mean
something dont collect information to keep
busy, only do it to find out what you want to
know, and then make sure that you store the
information in such a way that it is easy to
access.
38HOW WILL WE GET INFORMATION? (cont.)
- Usually you can use the reports, minutes,
attendance registers, financial statements that
are part of your work anyway as a source of
monitoring and evaluation information. - However, sometimes you need to use special tools
that are simple but useful to add to the basic
information collected in the natural course of
your work. Some of the more common ones are - Case studies
- Recorded observation
- Recording and analysis of important incidents
(called critical incident analysis) - Structured questionnaires
- One-on-one interviews
- Focus groups
- Sample surveys
- Systematic review of relevant official
statistics.
39WHO SHOULD BE INVOLVED?
- Almost everyone in the organisation or project
will be involved in some way in collecting
information that can be used in monitoring and
evaluation. This includes - The administrator who takes minutes at a meeting
or prepares and circulates the attendance
register - The fieldworkers who writes reports on visits to
the field - The bookkeeper who records income and
expenditure. - In order to maximise their efforts, the project
or organisation needs to - Prepare reporting formats that include
measurement, either quantitative or qualitative,
of important indicators. For example, if you want
to know about community participation in
activities, or womens participation
specifically, structure the fieldworkers
reporting format so that s/he has to comment on
this, backing up observations with facts. - Prepare recording formats that include
measurement, either quantitative or qualitative,
of important indicators. For example, if you want
to know how many men and how many women attended
a meeting, include a gender column on your
attendance list.
40WHO SHOULD BE INVOLVED? (cont.)
- Record information in such a way that it is
possible to work out what you need to know. For
example, if you need to know whether a project is
sustainable financially, and which elements of it
cost the most, then make sure that your
bookkeeping records reflect the relevant
information. - It is a useful principle to look at every
activity and say What do we need to know about
this activity, both process (how it is being
done) and product (what it is meant to achieve),
and what is the easiest way to find it out and
record it as we go along? - Designing a monitoring and/or evaluation process
- As there are differences between the design of a
monitoring system and that of an evaluation
process, we deal with them separately here. - Under monitoring we look at the process an
organisation could go through to design a
monitoring system. - Under evaluation we look at Purpose, Key
evaluation questions and Methodology.
Thank you.