Author: Hur Hassnain
The monitoring and evaluation field of humanitarian aid has seen advancements from traditional ways to new methods, such as using drones for collecting data. However, we have not yet answered the key questions: who is really benefiting from the learning results and who is accountable?
I have seen many evaluation wrap-up meetings happening in capital cities, mainly targeted at public figures/leaders, but this was the first time I saw evaluators sharing findings with the people who had benefitted from the project and who will support the scaling up of that learning for deeper and long-lasting impact on the ground.
This blog post is about a recent experience of sharing the findings of a final evaluation with survey respondents in rural Pakistan. The project evaluated is Y Care International’s “Improving financial resilience and promoting gender equity of disadvantaged young women in marginalised communities of Umerkot, Pakistan”.
Since the project was aimed at making people change-agents rather than just recipients of aid, the evaluation design purposely included a validation workshop to share the findings with communities, so they could learn from it and understand the importance of monitoring and evaluation to provide solid evidence of project results.
At the end of the meeting, community members were aware of what worked and what didn’t in the project, as well as the best possible ways for future improvements. One participant said, ‘this validation workshop was special, since it was the first time after a survey that the evaluation team shared the results with us’.