#EvalTuesdayTip: Enabling and Inhibiting Factors for Emergent Evaluators

Home » #EvalTuesdayTip: Enabling and Inhibiting Factors for Emergent Evaluators

In our recent blog post on Young & Emergent Evaluators (YEEs), Khulisa chatted to one of our own emerging evaluation stars, Heather Dixon. In October 2020, Heather represented Khulisa and YEEs in an online webinar discussing the state of YEEs in South Africa.


According to the South African Government’s Department of Planning, Monitoring & Evaluation (DPME) and the South African Monitoring and Evaluation Association (SAMEA), an emerging evaluator is someone who meets at least one of the following criteria:



From Heather’s perspective, becoming an evaluator is not as simple as ticking one of these three boxes. She identified two enabling factors to becoming an evaluator and three inhibiting factors.


What Factors Enable Emerging Evaluators?


Emerging evaluators can come from a variety of different university qualifications and professional specializations. This provides the opportunity for a vast array of recent graduates to become EEs. Transferable skills such as data collection, data capturing, and data analysis enable mid-career professionals to begin a career in evaluation.




What Factors Inhibit Emerging Evaluators?


The lack of funding opportunities for studying monitoring and evaluation (M&E) discourages graduates from exploring the field.


Added to the lack of funding, most M&E courses are only available at the postgraduate level and are “costly with stringent entry requirements” (DPME &SAMEA, 2020)


The SAMEA survey found this to be one of the main factors stated by participants as inhibiting their progression further into evaluation. Khulisa does its part to mentor the next generation of evaluators.


Khulisa’s Advice for Emerging Evaluators


In our blog post “Young & Emerging evaluators asked, Khulisa answered”, Khulisa answered questions posed by Masters’ evaluation students at the University of Cape Town (UCT). Here is an excerpt from the blog where we provide some guidance, some mentorship, to emerging evaluators.


What advice do you have for emerging evaluators entering the field?






References:

Watch the hour-long presentation at https://www.samea.org.za/resource?slug=event-webinar-sharing-survey-results-in-conversation-with-emerging-evaluators.

DPME & SAMEA (2020), The State of Emerging Evaluators in South Africa: Final Draft Survey Report accessed from: https://www.samea.org.za/summernotefile/dump?summernotefile_id=195 on 11/04/2021

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