The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
A first aid box.jpg

Field work in aid and international development is a constant rollercoaster. When you're in a wealthy capital city in a donor country, you get monthly reports. Possibly a weekly progress update, but not necessarily. Your teams in the field are too busy actually doing their work to report to you every day. Your big data sources are periodic phone calls and monthly and quarterly reports. That kind of time span evens things out. It lets you see the broad trends.

In country, though, every success and back-step hits you right in the gut. Your life feels like a series of wins and losses. It's hard to have any sense of overall progress when you just had a terrible meeting with the Ministry of Agriculture and your training just got cancelled. On the other hand, when things are going well, you're so full of energy and creativity and passion you can push your work to whole new levels of impact. It makes it a joy to go to the office.

The answer to this, of course, is decent monitoring and evaluation. If you 1) know your overall goal 2) Know the steps to get to that goal and 3) are collecting data on your program, then you can stop every so often and examine your progress. You can see what work you've done so far, what effect it is having, and if that effect is making progress toward your big goal they way you want it to.

M & E data tends to end up only in the hands of project directors and the M & E people. Having it widely available would be very beneficial, so that everyone in the project could see what was moving ahead and what was bogging down. It would require training everyone in how to read and understand M & E data, but that would be useful for a lot of reasons.

Notes and references


External links

  • If you feel as if you've lost perspective, Satori Worldwide offers retreats for aid workers on self-care.
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Page data
Authors Alanna Shaikh
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Ported from http://bloodandmilk.org/?p=1265 (original)
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 0 pages link here
Impact 169 page views
Created March 23, 2011 by Chris Watkins
Modified August 21, 2023 by Irene Delgado
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.