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Term
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Definition
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Baseline Benchmarks
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Data that describe the situation before any
project intervention.
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Bias
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The extent to which a measurement or method
systematically underestimates or overestimates a value.
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Effectiveness
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The extent to which the project produced its
expected outputs and thereby achieved its purpose and contributed to its goal.
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Efficiency
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The extent to which project inputs were
supplied and managed and activities organized in the most appropriate manner at
the least cost to produce the necessary outputs.
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Evaluability
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The extent to which a project has been defined
in such a way as to enable evaluation.
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Evaluation design
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The parameters that define the evaluation and
how it is to be undertaken, including the evaluation questions, methodology,
data collection plan, methods of analysis.
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Ex-ante evaluation
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An appraisal or needs assessment . Also used
for the "ex ante phase" of the evaluation cycle, which includes
feasibility studies, identification of project objectives and other such
functions done before the project begins.
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Ex-post evaluation
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An evaluation conducted upon the completion of
project execution. At IDB, ex-post evaluation is generally conducted 1 - 3 years
after the conclusion of the project (once the Project Completion Report is
prepared) and focuses on effectiveness, effects, and purpose levels.
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External validity
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The extent to which a finding applies (or can
be generalized) to persons, objects, settings, or times other than those that
were the subject of study.
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Impacts and Effects
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As defined in the Logical Framework Analysis
approach, impacts and effects refer to the planned and unplanned consequences of
the project; effects generally relate to its purpose and impacts relate to its
goal.
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Impact Evaluation
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An Ex-Post evaluation conducted long after
project completion (generally five years) and focussing on the goal and purpose
levels of a project (as defined in the Logical Framework Analysis approach) as
well as its sustainability and unplanned effects.
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Indicator
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The quantitative and qualitative specification
for an objective, used for measuring progress toward attaining the objective.
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Internal Validity
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The extent to which a finding within a
particular setting is supported by the available data.
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Lesson Learned
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A lesson learned is a general hypothesis based
on the findings of one or more evaluations, but which is presumed to relate to a
general principle that may apply more generally.
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Longitudinal Data
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Observations collected over a period of time on
a given population. Also called "time series data".
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Monitoring
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Monitoring is a procedure for checking the
effectiveness and efficiency of implementing a project by identifying strengths
and shortcomings and recommending corrective measures to optimize the intended
outcomes. Monitoring in this context is a quality check or appraisal of
activities of a whole system while it is actively in operation.
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Program Evaluation
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The application of scientific research methods
to estimate the extent to which observed results, intended or not, are caused by
program activities.
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Project Performance
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Project performance means achieving expected
results within planned timeframes and resource limits.
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Qualitative data
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Data that use non-numeric information for
description . Generally words, but may include photographs and film, audio
recordings, artifacts.
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Quantitative Data
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Information expressed in the form of numbers .
May be ordinal or ratio.
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Reliability
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The quality of a measurement process that would
produce similar results on (1) repeated observations of the same condition or
event, or (2) multiple observations of the same condition or event by different
means.
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Validity
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The extent to which the conclusions of an
evaluation are justified by the data presented (see also Internal Validity and
External Validity).
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