VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN PREVENTION PROGRAMMING GUIDE
Measure

Am I ready to consider an experimental or quasi-experimental evaluation? 

Decision-making guides

Given their complexity and the resources they require, you should only consider an RCT or a quasi-experimental design if you already have some evidence to already suggest program effectiveness.  The questions below can help you judge this.

Status of your programme 

Should you consider an experimental or quasi-experimental design? 

Your programme is small-scale with scope to influence only limited change in among small numbers of direct beneficiaries. 

No. You want to keep the resources you invest in evaluation fairly modest given your program is only small with scope for limited impact. You should consider conducting simple self-evaluation using a basic baseline and endline survey plus quantitative and qualitative monitoring. 

Your programme is new. it has either just been designed or has been  adapted for the first time in your context.

No. It is too early to invest in an expensive experimental (RCT) or quasi-experimental design. A simple baseline/endline evaluation with direct program beneficiaries will suffice. Including an element of process evaluation and qualitative elements is recommended. 

Your medium to large programme has shown some promising results through quantitative and/or qualitative findings as measured by a baseline/endline evaluation. 

Yes.  If you have promising results and sufficient budget, this could be a good opportunity to do a robust impact evaluation using experimental (RCT) or quasi-experimental methods. Including an element of process evaluation and qualitative elements is recommended (see following slides). 

Your programme has been evaluated by an RCT or quasi-experimental design, which found positive evidence of impact. Your programme has now entered a new phase and is being scaled up. 

Maybe. You may wish to implement a further RCT to test this new phase of the program. Alternatively, you could do a simple baseline/endline evaluation in order to check that the program is still producing positive results. As part of this, a process evaluation could be useful to track the quality of implementation in the scaled-up version of the program. With any design, investing in in-depth qualitative evaluation to further explore how the program is producing change could help further refine and optimize the program design and implementation – and generate further learning. 

Plan
Understand
Design
Implement
Measure