#EvalTuesdayTip: Rapid Group Surveys – an alternative to household surveys
Household Surveys are costly and time-intensive, and often the collected data is not analysed or reported. Khulisa used Rapid Group Surveys as a cost-effective and
Household Surveys are costly and time-intensive, and often the collected data is not analysed or reported. Khulisa used Rapid Group Surveys as a cost-effective and
Measuring reach is complex. In our latest blog, Khulisa highlights the most common pitfalls to avoid when measuring how many beneficiaries a program has reached.
Many excellent interventions fail to be scaled because of a discrepancy between research conditions and implementation conditions. This Freakonomics podcast transcript on scalability has implications
Evaluators increasingly need to assess whether a programme yield a return, or in simple terms: did the investment demonstrate any value for money (VfM)? These
The World Bank’s Women, Business and the Law 2020 report uses eight indicators to measure the legal differences between men and women as they move
Communicating your evaluation report in a single page requires careful messaging and visualisation. Khulisa collated the following quick links from a variety of sources to
Khulisa is very interested in the Blob Tree, an innovative evaluation method that could be used in various contexts, including when children are the primary
Evaluation and research are closely related (see our previous #EvalTuesdayTip here). In this article, author Dana Linnell Wanzer describes five potential relationships between evaluation and
It’s that time of the year again… We all arrive at the spin class on time with a green smoothie in hand and buy local
Khulisa was inspired by these set of historic infographics, developed by activist W.E.B. Du Bois in 1900, to challenge white supremacy. It’s sobering to realise