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Best practice standards, a menu of resources, and step by step guidance for DMERL (Design, Monitoring, Evaluation, Research & Learning) in each phase of the project management cycle.
Planning is about turning the vision and process developed in the Design phase into action. Once you have identified the results you want to achieve and the approach you want to take, you need to plan how you will do.
A well-planned project has:
This DMERL Framework shares two Best Practice Standards for the Plan phase of DMERL in the Project Management Cycle.
The MEL Plan should be based on your Theory of Change (TOC) and LogFrame and meet basic criteria for indicators, data collection, Community Engagement and Accountability (CEA) or Accountability to Affected Populations (AAP), Learning, and Evaluative actions. Additionally, the MEL plan should have sufficient budget, timeline and clear roles and responsibilities. The American Red Cross has developed an interactive e-learning course titled "Creating a Thoughtful MEL Plan from Your Theory of Change" that dives deep into this step. Please go to the recommended e-learning courses page of the Framework to link to the course.
You can use project management tools to plan out what you need to implement your project, as well as its MEL Plan. Some of the main tools are:
Your data management must be responsible: protect people’s data rights by responsibly handling data at every stage of the data lifecycle. Ensure human data is de-identified when possible, strictly accessible only to relevant members of the DMERL team and stored and shared securely. You should do this by developing ethical data collection protocols (e.g., informed consent) and do data impact assessment that identifies and plans for data issues.
You should right-size your data management to your needs and resources: there is a wide range of tools and techniques in every data life cycle stage (e.g., data collection, processing, storing and analysis and visualization). Your data management can be a manual or use IT solutions (e.g., Excel, Google, SPSS). If you have the resources, you can create a management information system, using fee-based options (e.g., KOBO or Power BI).
One way to incorporate Learning into the Planning phase is by connecting staff across units through cross team collaboration during planning processes. This helps us better understand the value of how different activities will help achieve design aims, often leveraging staff experience and tacit knowledge to plan future activities.