Difference between revisions of "Theory of Change"

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A theory of change describes how the intervention is expected to affect the outcomes of interest(based on theory) but it does not demonstrate whether the intervention causes the observed outcomes. It usually includes the most important outcomes(intermediate and final) that are critical to the casual chain, even if not all will be measure(see [[example https://github.com/worldbank/DIMEwiki/blob/master/Topics/Impact_Evaluation_Design/i2i_ConceptNote_Template.pdf]].
A theory of change describes how the intervention is expected to affect the outcomes of interest(based on theory) but it does not demonstrate whether the intervention causes the observed outcomes. It usually includes the most important outcomes(intermediate and final) that are critical to the casual chain, even if not all will be measure(see [[https://github.com/worldbank/DIMEwiki/blob/master/Topics/Impact_Evaluation_Design/i2i_ConceptNote_Template.pdf example]].





Revision as of 14:55, 3 February 2017

A theory of change describes how the intervention is expected to affect the outcomes of interest(based on theory) but it does not demonstrate whether the intervention causes the observed outcomes. It usually includes the most important outcomes(intermediate and final) that are critical to the casual chain, even if not all will be measure(see [example].


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