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Module 6: Clear link to results and monitoring of capacity development

Effective Capacity Development From Theory to Practice. Module 6: Clear link to results and monitoring of capacity development. This module discusses. How to define capacity results How to monitor capacity results.

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Module 6: Clear link to results and monitoring of capacity development

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  1. Effective Capacity Development From Theory to Practice Module 6: Clear link to results and monitoring of capacity development

  2. This module discusses • How to define capacity results • How to monitor capacity results

  3. CD Quality grid requirement: 3. Clear link to results and expected outcomes

  4. Why Is this Criteria Important? • Thinking about results is at the heart of good design and management • Capacity results are as important as other development results but easily lost in the results chain • How to capture Capacity Results? • Think in terms of the outputs (enhanced or modified) of the organization/system arising from CD process • Think beyond what external support will achieve…since has only limited bearing on outcome

  5. Contextual factors beyond influence Contextual factors and actors within influence Capacity Recurrent inputs Outputs Outcomes Widerimpact CD processes Internal resources CD support

  6. PARTNER ORGANISATION/ SECTOR CD PROCESS IMPACT EG: Improved development result eg: better health CD DEVELOPMENT OBJ (IMPACT) Increased use of services OUTCOME EG: Use of products and services by clients/ public CD IMMEDIATE OBJ (OUTCOME) Performance improved OUTPUTS EG: products and services CD OUTPUTS Capacity: Knowledge, systems, rules, behaviour CAPACITY EG: PFM, leadership, logistics, technical CD ACTIVITIES Courses, mentorship, advise INPUTS EG: Budget & Staff CD INPUTS TA, funds, training

  7. Some Challenges • Easy to fall into trap of focusing on donor inputs and outputs, not organisation/ sector outputs • Difficulty to specify the performance and capacity changes that are sought, and to propose indicators • Theory of change often un-developed/ incomplete. Assumption of simple linear causality, and underestimation of impact of different factors on results. • Pressure to deliver tangible products, less on facilitating processes, and building sustainable capacity for tomorrow

  8. Specifying CD Results • Link changes in capacity to proposed changes in performance • Performance = Performance change in organisational/ sector outputs (products and services) • Capacity =Enhanced or changed organisational / sector capacity • Aim at a realistic balance between: • improvements in capacity that can be achieved over the short to medium term and • the level of performance that can be expected to accrue. • Ideally reflected in a corporate/ sector development plan

  9. Look for results beyond TC deliverables Capacity Recurrent inputs Outputs Outcomes Widerimpact Internal resour-ces CD processes CD support Results focus of corporate or sector plan Results focus of CD strategy

  10. Message 1 Be realistic about what can be achieved: • Developing capacity is in most cases harder to achieve and support than envisaged • CD and support processes take longer time than envisaged • CD support only effective when aligned to partner’s reform process • Think carefully about the change process required to achieve desired results; is it simple, complicated, complex (next module)

  11. Message 2 Avoid over-specifying results given complexity/uncertainty of many CD processes • Need to be able to bargain and re-strategise along the way…. • Changing needs arise from lag between design & implementation • Imperfect knowledge when enter the process • Be clear on what you want to achieve, leave space to determine how you get there (programme estimates?)

  12. Guiding questions for formulating capacity results • Who or what (organisation, target group, sector, etc.) needs capacity? • Why is the capacity needed – for what purpose? • What type of capacity is needed in order to achieve the purpose? • Context and Capacity Assessment (QC1) = key sources of information in formulating capacity results • Quality of dialogue and level of ownership (QC2) and change readiness will influence what can be realistically achieved 12

  13. Remember…. • This is not about specifying outputs of external assistance • The results chain firmly belongs to the host sector/ agency • The role of external assistance comes later

  14. Exercise: Make the partner country CD results chain (what are the changes in capacity aimed for): • CD outcome • CD output(s) • Organisational/Sector Capacity results • CD process results • CD inputs

  15. Part 2: Monitoring Capacity Processes and Results • Monitoring focuses primarily on the processes, organisation and outputs of capacity development • Evaluation pays more attention on the CD results produced and their effect on outcomes and impact • M&E framework is the flip side of the results framework and should be developed AT THE SAME TIME • ESSENTIAL: M&E is the basis for lessons learning and the justification for changing project structure.

  16. M and E Organisational/ Sector Capacity Recurrent inputs Outputs Outcomes Widerimpact Internal resour-ces CD processes CD support Primary focus of monitoring Primary focus of evaluation

  17. Monitoring Changes in Capacity • Purpose is to track changes in capacity over time both for learning and accountability • Can be done by looking at: • changes in organisational/ sector outputs and • changes in organisational/ sector capacity

  18. Changes in Organisational/ Sector Outputs Capacity Recurrent inputs Outcomes Widerimpact Outputs Internal resour-ces CD processes TC support Results focus of corporate or sector plan Results focus of CD strategy

  19. Changes in organisational/ sector outputs • Delivery of products and services as foreseen in results framework • A helpful proxy indicator but; • Capacity does not translate into performance immediately • Outputs can improve for reasons other than capacity enhancement • Indicators include: • producer data: services, products, regulations • client / customer satisfaction

  20. Changes in Organisational/ Sector Capacity Capacity Recurrent inputs Outputs Outcomes Widerimpact Internal resour-ces CD processes TC support Results focus of corporate or sector plan Results focus of CD strategy

  21. Changes in organisational/ sector capacity • can be monitored in many ways: • Conduct periodic (self) assessments against a baseline • Conduct Assessments that are Peer-based or benchmarked against recognised standards • Indicators need to be jointly selected and understood, not imposed • Both quantitative and qualitative indicators required to capture both tangible and intangible elements of capacity • Consider use of innovative methodologies such as MSC, outcome mapping, and appreciative enquiry

  22. Monitoring the Quality of the Change Process Capacity Recurrent inputs Outputs Outcomes Widerimpact Internal resour-ces CD processes CD support Results focus of corporate or sector plan Results focus of CD strategy

  23. Monitoring the Change Process • Success depends on joint effort so mutual performance monitoring is important • What the country partner has done in terms of leading the process • What the external partner has done in terms of supporting the process • Can be applied at program level but also at level of individual expert, action • Need to also take account of changing contextual/ PEA factors during review • Arrange as periodic performance dialogue using a structured format • Use of QC in EAMR and ROM

  24. Examples of lead questions How has the context changed during the course of implementation? (Risks and Assumptions) • Have enabling and constraining factors increased/ decreased? • Has the program responded to a changing context? Have the right processes been used to achieve the desired changes in capacity? • Is the external assistance appropriate and performing? • Is the partner change management appropriate and effective? Are results being achieved in terms of enhanced capacity and performance? • What evidence is there of improved capacity and performance ? • What is aggregate effect of strengthening different components of capacity on overall capabilities? • Has adequate time elapsed to confirm that change is occurring? • What factors beyond program interventions are influencing results?

  25. Who Does What - Monitoring roles

  26. Exercise: Formulate CD indicators based on the results chain developed earlier

  27. END

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