What organizational and programmatic capacities in Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning (MEAL) are mostly needed for more effective, impactful and sustainable programs?

Mesa redonda

Sobre el evento

Development programs that make substantial differences in the lives of their beneficiaries have become a necessity in a world that looks for meaningful incremental growth that contributes to a well-articulated theory of change. While external evaluations of development programs are looked upon for objective, non-biased assessment of programs' worthiness and value, building organizational and programmatic capacities in monitoring, evaluation, accountability, and learning (MEAL) is instrumental for programs effectiveness, impact and sustainability. Developing a programmatic understanding of what it takes to deliver results beyond program outputs, how impact takes place, what factors facilitate or impede program sustainability together with developing the needed capacities for putting this understanding into the program design, monitoring plans, evaluation tools, and sustainability-fostering interventions, are instrumental to development.

Embarking on building programmatic understanding and capacities in MEAL, several questions are posed;
-- What MEAL-related capacities should be developed?
-- How could these capacities be best developed?, and
-- Who should be accountable for ensuring MEAL capacities are well-placed within the program and the organization at large?

This panel discussion - organized and led by AMIDEAST - aims to bring out some perspectives on the why and how of building organizational and programmatic capacities in MEAL, highlighting opportunities and challenges, and sharing several lessons learned in the process of building an institutional mindset and capacities in monitoring, evaluation, accountability, and learning.

Presentador/a

Nombre Título Biografía
Amal Nabil Nasralla, PhD Regional Director for Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning Dr. Nasralla has a doctorate in assessment and evaluation from the UK. She's been working as a reform specialist, senior advisor, and lead consultant to international organizations. She has led, managed, and participated in several development programs, evaluation studies, and assessment projects
Jennifer Smith Country Director for AMIDEAST Tunisia Ms. Smith is managing a variety of capacity-building programs for youth and civil society across Tunisia and Libya. She served as the Country Manager for an M&E consulting firm in Southeast Asia, conducting impact and process evaluations for clients such as the UN, World Bank, GIZ, and major INGOs
Leslie Nucho Vice President for Programs Leslie Nucho oversees AMIDEAST’s programs in the areas of English language, workplace/employability, professional skills training, education abroad, and institutional strengthening. She provides senior oversight for the implementation of the organization’s monitoring and evaluation strategy.

Temas

Oficiales de gobierno Organizaciones sin fines de lucro Sector Privado Público en general Practicantes Estudiantes

Detalles del evento

Iniciar sesión