Community-led monitoring (CLM) is a technique initiated and implemented by local community-based organizations, civil society groups, people living with HIV, and other marginalized groups or communities that collect quantitative and qualitative data about services. The main characteristics is its focus on getting input from recipients of services in a routine and systematic approach that will translate into action and change.
Thus, CLM helps puts communities, their needs, and their voices at the center of the national response.
A CLM approach led by local civil society organizations assists funders and public institutions in identifying issues of service access that have resulted in chronic problems, obstacles, and hurdles for long-term service consumption. CLM’s mission is to identify data-driven solutions to eliminate barriers, while at the same time ensuring that beneficiaries receive optimal client-centered services.
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Mr. Pantaleon Shoki is a graduate in economics. He has attended a wide range of postgraduate training opportunities including social sector analysis, an initiative of the World Bank under its IDF grant. The purpose of the program was to build the analytical capacity of Tanzania nationals. As a Social Sector Analyst, he has obtained good experience in research design and management as well as in data analysis and presentations using different soft wares such as STATA, SPSS, Ms-Excel,Ms-Word, Ms-Access, Ms-PowerPoint, and MsProject Mr. Shoki has held various positions and responsibilities with a number of international and local organizations in Tanzania. Since 1993 up to 1998, the World Bank has engaged Mr. Shoki into different research projects. The positions and responsibilities ranged from being a supervisor (in Tanzania Human Resource Development Survey, Tanzania Systematic Client Consultations, which covered various regions and districts) to a full consultant as a local staff of the World Bank in Tanzania (in the economic and social work study, which was conducted in six regions of mainland Tanzania. He was also a researcher for the World Bank/WHO/UNDP special program for research and training (in a study on Exemption Mechanisms for the Poor in Tanzania) responsible for fieldwork supervision managing a group of research assistants.
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2 thoughts on “Transforming community-led monitoring data for better services”
It shows that approach which you lead its a robust approach on identifying challenges and maintain it.
Absolutely. Community-led monitoring is very useful in helping communities to gain the ability to collect and analyze their own data. A novel experiment in India empowered villagers—particularly women, many of them illiterate—to design their own process for collecting and deploying data to track changes in the quality of public services and in their living standards and to make better decisions in village meetings. Source: https://courses.edx.org/assets/courseware/v1/bdedd76a070fe66c7f541fba7929ce14/asset-v1:WBGx+DBL01x+3T2021+type@asset+block/w1_r3.pdf
It shows that approach which you lead its a robust approach on identifying challenges and maintain it.
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Absolutely. Community-led monitoring is very useful in helping communities to gain the ability to collect and analyze their own data. A novel experiment in India empowered villagers—particularly women, many of them illiterate—to design their own process for collecting and deploying data to track changes in the quality of public services and in their living standards and to make better decisions in village meetings. Source: https://courses.edx.org/assets/courseware/v1/bdedd76a070fe66c7f541fba7929ce14/asset-v1:WBGx+DBL01x+3T2021+type@asset+block/w1_r3.pdf
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