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Development Evaluation and Research

CCIM Office 2 nd Sept, 2011. Development Evaluation and Research. Outlines. Steps for Evaluation and Research. 1. Objectives. 2. Focus & S cope. 3. Select Indicators. 4. Chose Study design. 5. Data Collection Plan. 6. Data Enumerators Train. 7.

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Development Evaluation and Research

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  1. CCIM Office 2nd Sept, 2011 Development Evaluation and Research

  2. Outlines

  3. Steps for Evaluation and Research 1 Objectives 2 Focus & Scope 3 Select Indicators 4 Chose Study design 5 Data Collection Plan 6 Data Enumerators Train 7 Data collection/Field Work 8 Data Cleaning & Verification 9 Data Processing & Aggregation 10 Data Analysing & Organization 11 Data Interpretation & Report 12 Data Use and Data Translation

  4. Sample size Calculation

  5. Confidence and Precision • Confidence Level: The standard confidence level is 95%. This means you want to be 95% certain that your sample results are an accurate estimate of the population as a whole. • Precision: This is sometimes called sampling error or margin of error. We often see this when results from polls are reported. • Confidence Interval: We can say that we are 95% certain (this is the confidence level) that the true population's average salary is between 1,800 and 2,200 (this is the confidence interval).

  6. Sample size Calculation N n= ---------- 1+(N(e)2

  7. Sample size Calculation

  8. Sample size Calculation N n= ---------- 1+(N(e)2 n: Sample Size N: Population Study e: Level of precision Yamane (1960) formula assumes a degree of variability (i.e. proportion) of 0.5 and a confidence level of 95%.

  9. Sample size Calculation n= sample size p = the approximate proportion you expect to find in the population q = 1-p e = the level of precision you can tolerate (plus or minus 10%, etc.) z = the z-value from a table for the level of confidence you want

  10. LOT5= 19 LQAS • LQAS = Lot Quality Assurance Sampling • Developed in the 1920’s • In 1980’s, method was adapted to measure health program coverage: • Immunization • Malaria • Neonatal tetanus elimination • Leprosy elimination • Family planning, • HIV/AIDS prevention • In Cambodia World Vision , CONCERN , ADRA, and other LOT1= 19 LOT2= 19 LOT3= 19 1. • Can be used locally • Can provide an accurate measure of coverage ( benchmark) • Can be used for quality assurance • is a simple, low cost random sampling methodology • Small sample • Meet the quality standards • Statistically determined sample size LOT4= 19 LOT5= 19

  11. Sample size for LQAS where n= sample size p = the approximate proportion you expect to find in the population q = 1-p e = the level of precision you can tolerate (plus or minus 10%, etc.) z = the z-value from a table for the level of confidence you want n = (1.96)2 (0.5 x 0.5) / (0.1) 2 n = (3.84) (0.25)/(0.01) n = 96

  12. Sampling Techniques we want to select 100 files from a population of 500? youdo not have a complete list of everyone in the population of interest Cluster sampling is a multi-step way or we may want to take a stratified sample of farmers at various distances from a major city combinations of methods are used

  13. Systematic Random Sampling

  14. LQAS

  15. Data collection Methods

  16. Data Analyzing • DATA ORGANIZATION • DATA INTERPRETATION • REPORTING • DATA USE

  17. Discussion

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