Session 2.3 Applying the INEE Minimum Standards: Emergency assessment and design to BUILD BACK...
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Transcript of Session 2.3 Applying the INEE Minimum Standards: Emergency assessment and design to BUILD BACK...
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Session 2.3Applying the INEE Minimum
Standards: Emergency assessment and design to BUILD BACK BETTER
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• Understand the need for – and carry out -- a thorough assessment and analysis of the assessment findings to develop an effective response that builds back better, reducing risk in the long-term
Session Objective
+ cross cutting issues
Access & Learning
Environment
Teaching & Learning
Teachers & Edu
Personnel
Education Policy &
Coordination
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INEE Minimum Standards: Analysis
Initial Assessment: participatory, intersectoral and holistic data, threats, vulnerabilities, capacities; local capacities, resources, strategies
Response: capacity building, updating strategies, strengthening national programmes
Monitoring: continuous, participatory, training to identify changes, trends and make adjustments
Evaluation: systematic, transparent, sharing lessons learnt, building capacity
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•What is bias?
•How can an assessment be biased?
Assessment
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Bias“Bias” means that the sample data contain an unintended and systematic sampling error. Thus they do not represent what they were intended to represent.
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– Political– Gender– Time of day/schedule
Possible forms of bias
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How can we avoid bias in assessments?
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Using different assessment techniques or different indicators of the same phenomenon
Varying the information sources
Varying the composition of the assessment team
Triangulation
Let’s read Analysis Standard 1 on Assessment
Triangulation
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Session Objectives:
Scenario: Disaster in Zambora
Assessing a disaster and designing an intersectoral
response plan for safe, quality education that Builds Back Better
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Group work: Designing a response plan to build back better
1) Which standards are relevant?
Prioritise two standards and develop response strategies to meet the priority standards (utilising indicators, guidance notes), filling out Response Plan Matrix:
How do these strategies incorporate DRR (mitigation, prevention, preparedness)?
How do they integrate cross-cutting issues? Who are the key stakeholders that you need to work with? What capacities can you build upon? What potential risks
and vulnerabilities do you need need to mitigate?
Assessment findings: Disaster in Zambora
Workbook pages 33-34
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Session 2.4Applying the INEE Minimum Standards:
Monitoring and Evaluation
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•Be aware of the difference between monitoring and evaluation
•Understand how the INEE Minimum Standards can and should be contextualised for monitoring and evaluating programmes and policies
Session Objectives
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Monitoring vs Evaluation
INEE Minimum Standards: Analysis
Monitoring: All relevant stakeholders regularly monitor the activities of the education response and the evolving education needs of the affected population• continuous, participatory measures that are used to demonstrate the change in a situation, identify trends, progress in or result of an activity in order to make adjustments (when necessary)
Evaluation: There is a systematic and impartial evaluation of the education response in order to improve practice and enhance accountability• systematic, transparent, sharing lessons learnt, building capacity
Both monitoring and evaluation require training, capacity building
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• INEE Minimum Standards indicators: qualitative, need to be contextualised to create tangible, locally relevant monitoring criteria
• Example: Afghanistan consortium on Community-based Education (workbook page 37)
SMART indicatorsS= specificM= measurableA= achievableR= realisticT= timely
Developing indicators
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Session 3A:
Disaster Risk Reduction through Education: InterSectoral Linkages and Cross-Cutting Issues
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Session Objectives
• Have an enhanced understanding of the critical linkages and the need for coordination between education and other preparedness, contingency planning and emergency response sectors (protection, water/sanitation, shelter, health, food aid, etc).
• Be aware of the INEE – Sphere Companionship agreement and inter-agency tools for integrating cross-cutting issues into mitigation, preparedness and response
• Be aware of programs being implemented within the region to ensure inter-sectoral linkages and the integration of cross-cutting issues
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Why should education be part of humanitarian response?
Brainstorm:
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• Education can be life-saving and life-sustaining, providing physical, psychosocial and cognitive protection, and is a key part of a child’s survival strategy
• Crisis which destabilise education can also be opportunities for positive transformation
• Accountability to needs and rights: – Education is what children/parents ask for during
crisis– Education is a right, even in an emergency, and key
to life with dignity
Education in EMERGENCIES because:
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What does education look like in an emergency?
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• Initiating policy and coordination mechanisms/structures (across actors in education and across sectors)
• Rapid needs assessment, design of response, with emphasis on safe structured activities --> restoration of education (safe spaces for children, providing security, protection, psychosocial support, basic literacy/numeracy, community engagement)
• Making intersectoral linkages: ensuring water and sanitation, food, health, etc. in safe spaces
• Non-formal education: essential life skills, recreation (play)• Provide essential teaching and learning materials,
recruitment/training teachers
In an emergency, education includes:
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Inter-sectoral linkages with education
In an emergency, what are the links between education and:
• Water/Sanitation• Health (including mental health)• Shelter and Camp Management• Nutrition and Food aid• Protection• Logistics
How do cross cutting issues (gender, HIV/AIDS, disability) intersect as a challenge and as an opportunity?
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• Stand-alone publications with their own recognizable identity but education integrated throughout Sphere in 2009/2010 revision and Sphere sectors integrated throughout INEE MS in revision + icon
• Formalization of training linkages
• Statement highlighting the formal relationship between Sphere and INEE included on the front cover of the INEE Minimum Standards Handbook: “The Sphere Project recognizes the INEE Minimum Standards for Education in Emergencies, Chronic Crises and Early Reconstruction as Companion Standards to the Sphere Project Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards in Disaster Response”
• Advocacy, promotion and communication linkages between INEE Secretariat and the Sphere Project
• Website links
INEE- Sphere Companionship
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New Tools to Integrate Cross Cutting Issues
In addition to cross-sectoral linkages, education preparedness, response and mitigation must also incorporate vital cross-cutting issues such as gender, disability and psychsocial well-being:
• IASC Gender Handbook in Humanitarian Action
• IASC Guideliens on Psychosocial Support and Mental Heath Wellbeing
• INEE Pocket Guides on Inclusive Education
• Other tools?
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Session 3B: Planning and facilitating a training workshop
on the INEE Minimum Standards +
Sharing information on relevant initiatives
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Brainstorm: preliminary plans for training
Questions to consider:
1) Who are the participants for this orientation or training workshop?
a) What kind of context are they working in? b) How can I adapt the training agenda, materials and
workshop structure to best meet their needs?
2) Who might I co-facilitate a training with?
3) LATER: Will the method applied in each session that I am planning help the participants to understand, analyse and connect in a simulating and comfortable environment?