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Impact Evaluation without Tears
Introduction and Overview
What is this course all about? (4:40)
RIE - what is it and why is it worth doing? (4:28)
What are the topics covered?
Course overview and structure (5:25)
Optional Pre-coursework materials
Comments and Questions
Section 1: Scoping and Framing the Evaluation
1a. What were we evaluating and who were the primary intended users? (4:04)
1b. Key RIE challenges; determining the evaluation approach & guiding principles (7:20)
1c. Where, how, why, which, and whose values we use in evaluation (4:42)
1d. How to write good Key Evaluation Questions (KEQs) (11:18)
1e. The Retrospective Impact Evaluation KEQ Cheat Sheet (3:20)
1f. Adapting the generic KEQs for a real evaluation (5:29)
1g. Using the KEQs to address the OECD-DAC evaluation criteria (4:39)
Intro and Section 1 recap, your questions and feedback
Section 2: Evaluating Design, Implementation, and Durability
2a. Answering the design, implementation, & durability KEQ – an education example (4:04)
2b. Data challenges: Finding historical records, mapping out what was done (5:44)
2c. Evaluating design, adaptation, and implementation – what to consider (4:57)
2d. What does equitable design and implementation look like? (5:40)
2e. Assessing the OECD/DAC criteria of Alignment and Coherence (2:30)
2f. Assessing durability and sustainability of component design and implementation (6:00)
2g. Rubric-guided evaluation of durability - a health and nutrition example (4:52)
2h. Where did the definitions in the rubrics come from? (1:56)
2i. How mixed methods and triangulation help support robust conclusions (2:06)
Section 2 recap, your questions and feedback
Section 3: Evaluating Outcomes, Impacts, and Sustainment
3a. The difference between sustainment and sustainability of outcomes and impacts (1:52)
3b. Answering the outcomes, impacts and sustainment KEQ (1:34)
3c. Figuring out which outcomes and impacts to track on education – Plan A (3:06)
3d. What do you do when evidence is unavailable and you need to switch to Plan B (2:05)
3e. Feasible student outcomes and impacts to explore – the key questions to ask (1:37)
3f. The importance of asking the “why” question for causal inference (2:01)
3g. What do equitable outcomes and impacts look like (1:11)
3h. Representing Save the Children’s impact on access to education (3:09)
3i. Assessing outcomes for young people trained as teachers by Save the Children (3:55)
3j. Strategies for collecting and analyzing outcome data on teachers’ income (2:34)
3k. Searching for outcomes and impacts related to health and nutrition (4:35)
3l. Figuring out which outcomes and impacts to track on health and nutrition – Plans A, B & C (8:16)
3m. Dataviz showing outcomes and impacts on health and nutrition (2:03)
3n. How to infer causation - tips and tricks (6:09)
3o. Tracking down ripple effects and unanticipated impacts (9:38)
Section 3 recap, your questions and feedback
Section 4: Assessing Value for Investment
4a. Answering the "Value" KEQ (4:45)
4b. Top tips and steps for doing Value for Investment analyses (2:56)
4c. Finding the big-ticket items for Value for Investment studies (5:24)
4d. Estimating the total investment made – the cost component of VfI studies (7:22)
4e. Monetizing benefits and estimating a cost-benefit ratio (2:00)
4f. Estimating a cost-benefit ratio for increased years of schooling (12:26)
4g. Estimating a cost-benefit ratio for potential lifetime earnings for trained teachers (10:59)
4h. Estimating a cost-benefit ratio for health savings due to access to clean water and sanitation (4:42)
4i. Six top tips for doing sound Value for Investment studies (2:52)
Section 4 recap, your questions and feedback
Section 5: Sensemaking, Synthesis, and Reporting
5a. Answering the KEQ about lessons learned for lasting change (2:57)
5b. The durability and sustainment evaluation cheat sheet (2:22)
5c. What helped or limited durability and sustainment in Save the Children’s project (5:28)
5d. The 3 Cs influencing how well transition and exit went (5:06)
5e. Cool tricks to make beautiful and effective dataviz (10:06)
5f. How to make clear, compelling, and insightful reports (7:11)
5g. Reporting pro tips (5:07)
5h. Ten tips for doing great Retrospective Impact Evaluations (24:15)
5i. Useful additional resources (2:40)
Section 5 recap, your questions and feedback
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3i. Assessing outcomes for young people trained as teachers by Save the Children
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