About the Course
Effective monitoring and evaluation in humanitarian programs requires more than familiarity with logframes and data collection forms. It demands that you can show your program's current performance against planned targets, where delivery bottlenecks or coverage gaps exist, realistic benchmarks for what success looks like given contextual constraints, which interventions deliver the highest impact per dollar spent, and how your program adapts based on evidence rather than assumptions. This course addresses each of these requirements across emergency, protracted, and recovery humanitarian contexts, referencing the operational realities of field-based programs operating in insecure environments, displacement settings, multi-agency coordination structures, and resource-constrained contexts.
Over the duration of this training, you will build capabilities in results framework design, indicator selection and measurement, data collection methodology for humanitarian settings, data quality assurance, real-time monitoring approaches, evaluation design and management, beneficiary accountability mechanisms, and evidence-based reporting to donors and coordination bodies. Every session prioritizes applied learning: you will work with real humanitarian program scenarios to produce deliverables you can adapt and use immediately in your own operations. The course draws on established humanitarian standards including the OECD-DAC evaluation criteria, Sphere Standards, CHS (Core Humanitarian Standard), and major donor M&E requirements from USAID, ECHO, DFID/FCDO, and UN agencies.
This course is designed for the reality that humanitarian professionals face: incomplete baseline data, mobile and hard-to-reach populations, limited staff capacity for data entry, security constraints on field visits, and the constant tension between speed of response and rigor of evidence. You will learn to build M&E systems that are robust enough to satisfy accountability requirements and lean enough to function in the field without overwhelming program teams.
Target Audience
This course is designed for professionals who are directly responsible for, or accountable for, monitoring and evaluation performance across humanitarian programs and organizations.
This course is designed for:
- M&E Officers and Managers responsible for designing and overseeing monitoring and evaluation systems across humanitarian projects and programs
- Program Managers and Coordinators who must track progress against results frameworks, manage adaptive programming, and report to donors on outcomes
- MEAL (Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability, and Learning) Specialists tasked with integrating accountability and learning into program cycles
- Humanitarian Program Directors and Country Directors accountable for organizational performance, donor compliance, and evidence-based decision-making
- Grants and Compliance Officers who review program data, verify deliverables, and ensure reporting meets donor contractual requirements
- Humanitarian Advisors and Technical Specialists providing sector-specific guidance (health, nutrition, WASH, protection, shelter) who need M&E integration in their technical areas
- Data Management and Information Management Officers responsible for data systems, databases, and information flows in humanitarian operations
- Donor Relations and Partnerships Managers who communicate program results to funding agencies, institutional donors, and government counterparts
- Quality Assurance and Accountability Officers overseeing beneficiary feedback mechanisms, complaint response systems, and program quality standards
- Anyone accountable for proving humanitarian program impact, improving evidence-based decision-making, or strengthening M&E systems in emergency and development contexts
Course Objectives
This course equips you to design, implement, and manage monitoring and evaluation systems that strengthen humanitarian accountability, satisfy donor compliance requirements, and generate evidence for adaptive programming.
By the end of this course, you'll be able to:
- Understand the role and strategic value of M&E within the humanitarian program cycle, including the linkages between monitoring, evaluation, accountability, and learning (MEAL) and their relevance to CHS, Sphere, and OECD-DAC frameworks
- Measure program performance by selecting appropriate quantitative and qualitative indicators, establishing baselines, and defining realistic targets aligned with results frameworks and theory of change models
- Design comprehensive M&E plans that specify data collection methods, tools, frequencies, responsibilities, and data flow processes suitable for emergency, protracted, and recovery humanitarian settings
- Apply data collection methodologies appropriate for humanitarian contexts, including household surveys, key informant interviews, focus group discussions, observation protocols, and remote monitoring techniques for insecure environments
- Develop data quality assurance protocols that address common humanitarian data challenges: incomplete records, enumerator bias, double-counting of beneficiaries, and inconsistent reporting across multi-site operations
- Assess program relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, impact, and sustainability using the OECD-DAC evaluation criteria, and manage internal and external evaluations from terms of reference through to management response
- Set up performance dashboards and tracking systems using KPIs, traffic-light indicators, and variance analysis to flag underperformance early and trigger corrective action
- Communicate M&E findings to diverse stakeholders through donor reports, cluster presentations, learning briefs, and beneficiary-facing accountability mechanisms that build trust and transparency
Requirements & Prerequisites
There are no strict prerequisites for this course, though you will gain the most value if you have at least one year of experience working in or with humanitarian programs. Familiarity with basic project management concepts (logframes, budgets, work plans) and comfort working with spreadsheets (Microsoft Excel or Google Sheets) will allow you to engage fully with the applied exercises. Prior exposure to monitoring and evaluation concepts is helpful but not required, as the course builds systematically from foundations through advanced application. You should bring a laptop or tablet capable of accessing web-based tools (KoBoToolbox, Power BI) for hands-on data collection and visualization exercises.
Professional and Organizational Impact
When you lead monitoring and evaluation with credible data and practical strategies, you become a trusted driver of program quality and organizational accountability.
As a participant, you will benefit by:
- Build technical expertise in M&E system design, indicator development, and evaluation management that positions you as an indispensable resource in any humanitarian operation
- Gain confidence in making evidence-based recommendations to senior leadership, knowing your data collection and analysis methods can withstand scrutiny from donors and evaluators
- Strengthen your ability to balance rigor with practicality, designing M&E systems that produce credible evidence without overwhelming field teams already stretched thin
- Enhance your credibility with institutional donors (USAID, ECHO, UN agencies, DFID/FCDO) by demonstrating fluency in their specific M&E and reporting requirements
- Develop the skill to translate complex M&E data into clear, compelling narratives that secure continued funding and stakeholder support for your programs
- Position yourself as a results-oriented professional in a sector where demand for skilled M&E practitioners consistently outpaces supply, opening doors to senior MEAL, program quality, and technical advisory roles
- Expand your professional toolkit with reusable templates, frameworks, and checklists for M&E plans, data quality audits, evaluation terms of reference, and performance dashboards that you can deploy across any humanitarian context
Organizations that embed robust monitoring and evaluation into humanitarian operations reduce waste, mitigate compliance risks, and build lasting credibility with donors and affected communities.
Your organization will benefit from:
- Reduce program delivery costs by identifying underperforming activities early through real-time monitoring, enabling reallocation of resources to higher-impact interventions before budget cycles close
- Strengthen donor compliance and reduce the risk of funding clawbacks, audit findings, and negative evaluations by ensuring M&E systems meet contractual reporting standards from the outset
- Build organizational reputation and trust with affected communities by implementing transparent accountability mechanisms, beneficiary feedback loops, and participatory M&E approaches aligned with the Core Humanitarian Standard
- Gain competitive advantage in proposal development by demonstrating a track record of evidence-based programming, credible impact measurement, and learning-oriented organizational culture
- Improve program quality and adaptive management capacity by equipping staff with the tools and skills to use monitoring data for timely course correction rather than retrospective reporting alone
- Reduce risk exposure from poor data management, including data protection violations, inaccurate beneficiary counts, and reporting inconsistencies that trigger donor investigations or reputational harm
- Maximize return on program investment by building organizational systems that capture, analyze, and apply learning across projects, ensuring that what works in one context informs design and scale-up in others
Training Methodology
This is a practical, outcome-driven course designed to turn M&E aspirations into measurable action and credible reporting systems you can implement immediately in your humanitarian programs.
Methodology includes:
- Guided M&E plan development exercises where you build a complete monitoring and evaluation plan using humanitarian program scenario, including results frameworks, indicator reference sheets, and data collection schedules
- Simulation-based exercises where you analyze incoming monitoring data, identify performance variances, and make adaptive management decisions under time and resource constraints typical of humanitarian operations
- Data quality assessment practicum using a structured audit checklist to evaluate a sample humanitarian dataset for completeness, accuracy, timeliness, consistency, and validity, then develop corrective actions
- Evaluation management workshop where you draft terms of reference for an external evaluation, develop evaluation questions aligned to OECD-DAC criteria, and design an evaluation matrix linking questions to data sources and methods
- Sector-specific case studies drawn from real humanitarian programs across emergency health response, refugee camp management, food security and livelihoods programming, and WASH interventions in conflict-affected settings
- Group strategy design sessions where teams develop M&E systems under realistic constraints: limited budgets, insecure field access, mobile populations, low staff M&E capacity, and multiple donor reporting requirements
- Reflection prompts that challenge your current M&E practices by asking you to map your existing monitoring system against CHS commitments and Sphere Standards, identifying specific gaps and priority improvements
Upcoming Sessions
Next available dates worldwide
Certification
Recognized credentials that advance your career
Participants who complete the Monitoring and Evaluation of Humanitarian Programs Training Program earn a Trainingcred Certificate of Achievement, demonstrating professional competence and alignment with global standards in learning and development.
NITA Accredited
Accredited by the National Industrial Training Authority, ensuring programs meet nationally recognized standards of quality and relevance.
CPD Certified
Recognized by the CPD Certification Service, ensuring every program meets internationally benchmarked standards of professional excellence.
Why this course earns its place on your CV
Accredited training, practitioner trainers, and peers on the same career track — the three things real expertise is built on.
Skills Relevance
- Equip yourself with cutting-edge M&E tools vital for humanitarian success.
- Master field-ready techniques to enhance program impact and efficiency.
- Learn from real-world scenarios to effectively tackle humanitarian challenges.
Expert Delivery
- Taught by leading experts active in global humanitarian fields.
- Gain insights from instructors with decades of on-ground experience.
- Benefit from high-quality mentorship that turns theory into practice.
Career Advancement
- Boost your employability with highly sought-after M&E skills.
- Position yourself as a key player in international development agencies.
- Secure a pathway to leadership roles in humanitarian organizations.























