Difference between revisions of "Theory of Change"

Jump to: navigation, search
(10 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<span style="font-size:150%">
<onlyinclude>A theory of change is a detailed description of the mechanisms through which a change is expected to occur in a particular situation. A theory of change identifies the goals, preconditions, requirements, assumptions, interventions, and indicators of a program, providing important insight into and guidance on intervention and impact evaluation design. </onlyinclude>
<span style="color:#ff0000"> '''NOTE: this article is only a stub. Please add content!''' </span>
</span>


== Read First ==
* A theory of change is best completed in the planning stages of an impact evaluation, as it can play a critical role in guiding intervention design, data collection, analysis and reporting. 
==Building the Theory of Change==


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 measured(see [https://github.com/worldbank/DIMEwiki/blob/master/Topics/Impact_Evaluation_Design/i2i_ConceptNote_Template.pdf example]).
According to the Theory of Change [http://www.theoryofchange.org/what-is-theory-of-change/how-does-theory-of-change-work/ website], a theory of change is built in six steps. First, identify long-term goals. Second, backwards map and connect the preconditions and requirements necessary to achieve the goals; explain why these preconditions are necessary and sufficient. Third, identify your basic assumptions about the context. Fourth, identify the interventions that will create your desired change. Fifth, develop indicators to measure outcomes. Finally, write a narrative to explain the logic of the interventions.  


[https://www.povertyactionlab.org/sites/default/files/3.%20Theory%20of%20Change%202014.03.10.pdf Poverty Action Lab] identifies seven similar steps to building a theory of change: 1) analyze the situation, 2) clarify the program goal, 3) design the program/product, 4) map the causal pathway, 5) identify explicit assumptions, 6) design specific, measurable, achievable, reliable and time-bound indicators, and 7) convert to logical framework.


==Applications==


== Read First ==
The theory of change uses backwards mapping to create a set of connected outcomes known as the “pathway of change”. The “pathway of change” graphically represents the change process and acts as the skeleton around which the other elements of the theory are developed. The “pathway of change” typically follows the following structure:
A theory of change sets the structure for the hypotheses, evaluation questions, and outcomes of interest. It also lists key indicators for developing the implementation protocol and IE monitoring system aimed at understanding what is being evaluated, and whether the critical intervention activities/components were implemented/taken up as planned.
 
 
== Guidelines ==
* organize information on the topic into subsections. for each subsection, include a brief description / overview, with links to articles that provide details
===Subsection 1===
===Subsection 2===
===Subsection 3===


''If [inputs] and [activities] produce [outputs] this should lead to [outcomes] which will ultimately contribute to [goal].''


A theory of change empowers organizations and initiatives to achieve, measure and show their impact. It provides evaluators with a framework on which they can base hypotheses, evaluation questions, and outcomes of interest. It also identifies key indicators, guiding evaluators towards the “what” and “when” of evaluation and strengthening monitoring systems overall.


== Back to Parent ==
== Back to Parent ==
This article is part of the topic [[Impact Evaluation Design]]
This article is part of the topic [[Experimental Methods]]


== Additional Resources ==
== Additional Resources ==
* list here other articles related to this topic, with a brief description and link
* The [http://www.theoryofchange.org/ Theory of Change] website, including its [http://www.theoryofchange.org/library/toc-examples/ library] of theory of change examples
 
* Innovation for Poverty Action’s [https://www.poverty-action.org/sites/default/files/publications/Goldilocks-Deep-Dive-Guiding-Your-Program-to-Build-Theory-of-Change.pdf Guiding Your Program to Build a Theory of Change]
[[Category: Impact Evaluation Design]]
* JPAL’s guide on [https://www.povertyactionlab.org/sites/default/files/3.%20Theory%20of%20Change%202014.03.10.pdf guide] on Theory of Change
[[Category: Experimental Methods]]

Revision as of 09:19, 4 April 2019

A theory of change is a detailed description of the mechanisms through which a change is expected to occur in a particular situation. A theory of change identifies the goals, preconditions, requirements, assumptions, interventions, and indicators of a program, providing important insight into and guidance on intervention and impact evaluation design.

Read First

  • A theory of change is best completed in the planning stages of an impact evaluation, as it can play a critical role in guiding intervention design, data collection, analysis and reporting.

Building the Theory of Change

According to the Theory of Change website, a theory of change is built in six steps. First, identify long-term goals. Second, backwards map and connect the preconditions and requirements necessary to achieve the goals; explain why these preconditions are necessary and sufficient. Third, identify your basic assumptions about the context. Fourth, identify the interventions that will create your desired change. Fifth, develop indicators to measure outcomes. Finally, write a narrative to explain the logic of the interventions.

Poverty Action Lab identifies seven similar steps to building a theory of change: 1) analyze the situation, 2) clarify the program goal, 3) design the program/product, 4) map the causal pathway, 5) identify explicit assumptions, 6) design specific, measurable, achievable, reliable and time-bound indicators, and 7) convert to logical framework.

Applications

The theory of change uses backwards mapping to create a set of connected outcomes known as the “pathway of change”. The “pathway of change” graphically represents the change process and acts as the skeleton around which the other elements of the theory are developed. The “pathway of change” typically follows the following structure:

If [inputs] and [activities] produce [outputs] this should lead to [outcomes] which will ultimately contribute to [goal].

A theory of change empowers organizations and initiatives to achieve, measure and show their impact. It provides evaluators with a framework on which they can base hypotheses, evaluation questions, and outcomes of interest. It also identifies key indicators, guiding evaluators towards the “what” and “when” of evaluation and strengthening monitoring systems overall.

Back to Parent

This article is part of the topic Experimental Methods

Additional Resources