Monitoring and evaluation of capacity development faces a fundamental dilemma. On the one hand, capacity development is a long-term process which occurs through a series of changes, related to values, attitudes and norms, which are difficult, if not impossible, to measure. On the other hand, evaluation tends to focus on short-term changes and to examine what is easy to perceive. As a result, at times we privilege short-term efforts which lead to visible change, even if they may be detrimental to sustainable improvement. However, when evaluation tends to focus on long-term impact, measurement and attribution difficulties quickly become evident. Although there is no easy solution to this, some new approaches may succeed better in assessing the impact of capacity development. They are characterized by stronger participation by beneficiaries in the assessment of change. They use a mixture of qualitative and quantitative methods. They focus on the relevance of interventions in specific contexts. Most importantly, they want the monitoring and evaluation process to be a form of capacity development; in other words, participants learn through and from the evaluation about how the programmes and their own practices can change for the better.
Learning purposefully in capacity development: why, what and when to measure?
Year of publication
2009
Place of publication
Paris
Pages
50
Publisher
UNESCO IIEP
Series
Rethinking capacity development
Language
English
Topic
Resource type