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Monitoring and evaluation are essential to any project or program. Through this process, the organizations collect and analyse data, to determine if a program has fulfilled its goals. Monitoring begins right away and extends through the duration of the program. Evaluation comes after and assesses how well the program performed. Every organization should have a monitoring and evaluation system. Evaluation can be retrospective or prospective

Retrospective impact evaluation (RIE) is used to assess the value, worth, and merit of an evaluation after it has occurred. The focus of RIE is on examining both intended and unintended impacts, with a particular emphasis on determining the sustainability of the intended results.

Prospective Evaluation involves the collection of data about individuals as their characteristics or circumstances change over time by following them. One example of a prospective study is a birth cohort study.

The main objective of monitoring and evaluation is to determine project/program Relevance, efficiency, effectiveness, impact, sustainability/adaptability and causality and alternative strategy.

PROGRAM EVALUATION PROCESS

Program evaluation goes through four phases that is Planning, implementation, completion and dissemination and reporting.

Planning: This involves determining the feasibility of the evaluation, identifying the stakeholders, and specifying short-term and long-term goals. Defining and identifying the stakeholders is a significant component of the planning stage. Stakeholders are people or organisations that have interest in or could be affected by the program evaluation.

Implementation: Here evaluation may examine whether the program is successfully recruiting and retaining its participants, using training materials that meet standards for accuracy and clarity, maintaining its projected timelines, coordinating efficiency with other ongoing programs and activities and meeting applicable legal standards

Completion: Following completion of the program, evaluation may examine its immediate outcomes or long-term impact or summarize its overall performance including for example its efficiency and sustainability.

Dissemination and Reporting: Dissemination of the evaluation results requires adequate resources such as people, time and money. And to ensure that dissemination and reporting of results to all the appropriate audiences is accomplished in a comprehensive and systematic manner, one needs to develop a dissemination plan during the planning stage of evaluation.

PROGRAM MONITORING

Program monitoring takes the following steps

Designing an efficient plan for monitoring

The program manager must consider the following while designing a plan for monitoring they have to identify the key areas in the project that need continuous attention, program manager must set the targets that need to be achieved, they must also take note of the resources available.

Designing an effective report management mechanism

Regular meetings between project managers and team members can provide project managers with a comprehensive understanding of the project’s progress and enable them to identify any issues that may impede the project’s success.

Recommendations for the program improvement

This is one of the most important activities in project monitoring. The program manager has to design a report management mechanism that effectively passes the information among the team members and top management. This is important because the program managers get feedback and advice from the top-level management which gives them better ideas about the program monitoring process.

Ensuring guidelines and recommendations are followed accordingly

Program managers must also ensure that the team is working according to the set guidelines given by the client and also must see that the recommendations made by the top management team are implemented by the production team.

IMPORTANCE OF MONITORING AND EVALUATION

Monitoring and Evaluation helps organizations clasp problems early. Projects never go perfectly according to plan, but a well-designed M&E helps the project to stay on track and perform well. M&E plans help define a project’s scope, establish interventions when things go wrong, and give everyone an idea of how those interventions affect the rest of the project. This way, when problems inevitably arise, a quick and effective solution can be applied.

Monitoring and Evaluation help ensure efficient use of resources:  Every project needs resources. How much cash is on hand determines things like how many people work on a project, the project’s scope, and what solutions are available if things get off course. The information collected through monitoring reveals gaps which require resources to address. Resources could easily be wasted in one area that isn’t the source of the issue. Monitoring and evaluation helps prevent such waste

Monitoring and Evaluation help organizations learn from their mistakes: Mistakes and failures are part of every organization. M&E provides a detailed blueprint of everything that went right and everything that went wrong during a project. Thorough M&E documents and templates allow organizations to pinpoint specific failures, as opposed to just guessing what caused problems. Often, organizations can learn more from their mistakes than from their successes.

Monitoring and Evaluation improve decision-making: Data should drive decisions. M&E processes provide the essential information needed to see the big picture. After a project wraps up, an organization with good M&E can identify mistakes, successes, and things that can be adapted and replicated for future projects. Decision-making is then influenced by what was learned through past monitoring and evaluation.

Monitoring and Evaluation help organizations stay organized: Developing a good M&E plan requires a lot of organization. That process in itself is very helpful to an organization. It has to develop methods to collect, distribute, and analyze information. Developing M&E plans also requires organizations to decide on desired outcomes, how to measure success, and how to adapt as the project goes on, so those outcomes become a reality. Good organizational skills benefit every area of an organization.

Monitoring and Evaluation helps organizations replicate the best projects/programs: Organizations don’t like to waste time on projects or programs that go nowhere or fail to meet certain standards. The benefits of M&E that we’ve described above – such as catching problems early, good resource management, and informed decisions – all result in information that ensures organizations replicate what’s working and let go of what’s not.

Monitoring and Evaluation encourages innovation: Monitoring and evaluation can help fuel innovative thinking and methods for data collection. While some fields require specific methods, others are open to more unique ideas. As an example, fields that have traditionally relied on standardized tools like questionnaires, focus groups, interviews, and so on can branch out to video and photo documentation, storytelling, and even fine arts. Innovative tools provide new perspectives on data and new ways to measure success.

Monitoring and Evaluation encourages diversity of thought and opinions: With monitoring and evaluation, the more information the better. With M&E tools like surveys, they’re only truly useful if they include a wide range of people and responses. In good monitoring and evaluation plans, all voices are important.

Monitoring and Evaluation results in better transparency and accountability: Because organizations track, analyze, and report on a project during the monitoring phase, there’s more transparency. Information is freely circulated and available to stakeholders, which gives them more input on the project.

Monitoring and evaluation are critical for ensuring that programs and projects are achieving their intended outcomes and making the best use of available resources. They also help organizations to learn and improve, and to engage stakeholders in the program management cycle.

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