Humanitarian, Gender Equality, and Social Protection Uganda

Monitoring and Evaluation of Humanitarian Programs Training Course

Humanitarian organizations operate under extraordinary pressure: tight funding cycles, rapidly shifting contexts, and the expectation that every dollar translates into measurable impact for affected populations. Yet many programs still rely on ad hoc data collection, inconsistent indicators, and evaluation reports that satisfy compliance checkboxes without genuinely informing decisions. Can you demonstrate, with credible evidence, that your current humanitarian program is reaching the right people with the right interventions at the right time? The gap between what donors, beneficiaries, and oversight bodies expect and what most M&E systems actually deliver creates real consequences: funding clawbacks, reputational damage, missed opportunities to scale what works, and the continuation of interventions that fail the communities they intend to serve.

This monitoring and evaluation in humanitarian programs training course bridges that gap by equipping you with the frameworks, tools, and practical skills to design, implement, and manage M&E systems that produce actionable evidence under real humanitarian conditions. Whether you manage emergency response programs, protracted crisis operations, or transition and recovery initiatives, this course gives you a structured methodology to build results frameworks, define meaningful indicators, collect quality data in challenging environments, and produce evaluation reports that stakeholders trust. By the end of this course, you will have developed a complete M&E plan, a data quality assurance protocol, and a stakeholder reporting template ready for immediate deployment in your next program cycle.

Duration
10 Days
Duration
Certificate
Certificate
Included
Delivery
Instructor-Led
Delivery
Level
Foundation To Intermediate
Level
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Live Online Training

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Mon - Fri (10 Days)
USD 1,700
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Mon - Fri (10 Days)
USD 1,700
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Weekend (8 Wks)
USD 1,700
Starts
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Mon - Fri (10 Days)
USD 1,700
Starts
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Mon - Fri (10 Days)
USD 1,700
Starts
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Weekend (8 Wks)
USD 1,700
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (10 Days)
USD 1,700

Classroom Training

In-person sessions at premier locations

Nairobi Kenya
Mon - Fri
10 Days
USD 3,200
Kigali Rwanda
Mon - Fri
10 Days
USD 3,800
Dubai United Arab Emirates (UAE)
Mon - Fri
10 Days
USD 8,200
Addis Ababa Ethiopia
Mon - Fri
10 Days
USD 4,900
Customized Content
Team Training
Flexible Dates

In-person training at our premier venues — pick a city and date that works for you.

Location Duration Fee Language
Nairobi, Kenya Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,200 English See dates & reserve →
Kigali, Rwanda Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,800 English See dates & reserve →
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 8,200 English See dates & reserve →
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 4,900 English See dates & reserve →
Abuja, Nigeria Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 5,600 English See dates & reserve →
Zanzibar, Tanzania Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 4,800 English See dates & reserve →
Mombasa, Kenya Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,400 English See dates & reserve →
Cape Town, South Africa Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 English See dates & reserve →
Johannesburg, South Africa Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,000 English See dates & reserve →
Kampala, Uganda Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,800 English See dates & reserve →
Pretoria, South Africa Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 6,600 English See dates & reserve →
Lagos, Nigeria Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 5,000 English See dates & reserve →
Arusha, Tanzania Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 4,000 English See dates & reserve →
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,800 English See dates & reserve →
Nakuru, Kenya Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,200 English See dates & reserve →
Kisumu, Kenya Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,200 English See dates & reserve →
Accra, Ghana Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,900 English See dates & reserve →
Naivasha, Kenya Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 3,400 English See dates & reserve →

Live, instructor-led sessions you can join from anywhere — pick the next start date below.

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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.


Local Application and Business Return

How participants can apply the training in local operating conditions, and the return their organisation can plan for.

How participants apply this

Participants in Uganda apply this course by translating project goals into a results framework, then selecting indicators that capture both service delivery and beneficiary outcomes. They can set up data-collection tools for field teams, define verification checks, and build reporting templates that are usable even when connectivity, access, or staff time is limited. The course also supports practical work such as comparing partner reports, spotting inconsistencies across sites, and using findings to revise targeting, timing, or modality. For teams working in humanitarian response, the same skills help them show whether assistance is timely, appropriately targeted, and delivered with acceptable data quality.

Expected ROI

Within 6–12 months, organisations usually gain faster and more reliable reporting, fewer data-quality errors, and better alignment between program activities and donor expectations. Managers can spend less time reconciling inconsistent reports and more time deciding what to adapt, scale, or stop. Stronger M&E also tends to improve proposal credibility because teams can show how they will measure change, not just count activities. For field programs, that often translates into clearer accountability, better learning across sites, and lower risk of weak evidence undermining renewal or expansion decisions.

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

Virtual

(Zoom) Training
USD 1,700
22nd Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Nairobi

Kenya
USD 2,900
20th Jul-31st Jul 2026

Kigali

Rwanda
USD 3,800
22nd Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Dubai

United Arab Emirates (UAE)
USD 7,800
22nd Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Addis Ababa

Ethiopia
USD 4,900
22nd Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Abuja

Nigeria
USD 5,600
6th Jul-17th Jul 2026

Zanzibar

Tanzania
USD 4,300
6th Jul-17th Jul 2026

Mombasa

Kenya
USD 3,400
29th Jun-10th Jul 2026

Cape Town

South Africa
USD 7,500
22nd Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Johannesburg

South Africa
USD 6,000
20th Jul-31st Jul 2026

Pretoria

South Africa
USD 6,600
29th Jun-10th Jul 2026

Kampala

Uganda
USD 3,700
13th Jul-24th Jul 2026

Lagos

Nigeria
USD 5,000
22nd Jun-3rd Jul 2026

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.

Tools and platforms relevant to this field

Examples Uganda teams may encounter, and that may be featured in training where they support the confirmed course scope.

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These are field-relevant examples, not a promise that every tool will be covered. Exact coverage depends on the confirmed course scope, participant needs, and delivery format.

  • KoBoToolbox KoBoToolbox
    Used for mobile data collection in field settings where enumerators need offline-capable forms and rapid upload of survey results.
  • DHIS2 HISP Centre, University of Oslo
    Used by health and humanitarian actors for routine service and outcome reporting where standardized indicators must be tracked across facilities or districts.
  • Microsoft Power BI Microsoft
    Used to turn field data and partner reports into dashboards for donor updates, trend analysis, and management decisions.

Real Results from Real Professionals

Thousands of professionals have transformed their careers through our training programs. Now, it's your turn.

Local market advisory

Course relevance for Uganda

A country-specific view of market pressure, regulatory context, and practical business return behind this training.

  • Market context
  • Regulatory fit
  • Business application

Why this course matters in Uganda

A market-specific advisory on the operating pressures this course helps teams address.

In Uganda, monitoring and evaluation matters because humanitarian and recovery programs operate in a context where evidence must justify scarce funding, target people affected by displacement or shocks, and support fast course-correction when conditions change. This training is most relevant for program managers, MEAL teams, grants staff, field coordinators, and donors who need to decide whether an intervention is reaching the intended population and delivering results worth scaling. It helps leaders compare performance across sites, identify gaps in data quality, and make defensible decisions about continuation, redesign, or exit.
Evidence for funding decisions

Ugandan humanitarian actors need M&E systems that can show donors and oversight teams whether outputs and outcomes are credible enough to sustain funding in volatile response cycles.

Adaptive delivery in changing contexts

Because needs can shift quickly across emergency, recovery, and resilience activities, teams need indicators and reporting routines that support rapid program adjustment rather than end-of-project reporting only.

Accountability to affected people

Strong feedback, disaggregation, and data quality practices help organizations demonstrate that assistance is reaching the right communities and not just producing activity counts.

This training is timely because humanitarian operations in Uganda increasingly need stronger evidence, cleaner reporting, and more disciplined learning loops to satisfy donors and coordinate across multiple implementing partners. It is especially relevant where organizations are balancing emergency response, recovery, and longer-term resilience work and need one M&E approach that can serve all three.

Regulatory context in Uganda

The local regulators, laws, and frameworks shaping this discipline, with the curriculum mapped to what teams need to know.

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Regulators

  • OPM Coordinates refugee and disaster management functions that shape humanitarian program priorities, access, and reporting expectations in Uganda.
  • NGO Bureau Regulates NGO operations and compliance, making it relevant for humanitarian organisations that must document activities and results.
  • UBOS Provides official statistics and data standards that support baseline setting, sampling, and evidence-based program measurement.

Frameworks the course aligns with

  • 01 Non-Governmental Organisations Act · 2016
  • 02 Data Protection and Privacy Act · 2019
  • 03 Refugees Act · 2006

Frequently Asked Questions

Got questions? We've gathered the answers to common queries to help you feel confident and informed.

Who else has attended this training course?

Join global leaders and experts from top-tier organizations who have already benefited from this training. Here are just a few of our past participants:

Designation Organization
Human Rights Education Assistant Amnesty International, NIGERIA
Advisor-I, RM&E Ipas Bangladesh, Bangladesh
MEAL Coordinator Ipas Bangladesh, Bangladesh
Project Manager Ipas Bangladesh, Bangladesh

Your seat is waiting.

Join these industry leaders and take the next step in your career.

Yes. The course is relevant for insecure or rapidly changing environments because it focuses on practical indicator design, manageable data collection, and reporting routines that still work when access is constrained. Participants learn how to balance rigor with operational reality rather than relying on ideal-field conditions.

No. Program managers, grants teams, coordinators, and technical leads all use M&E evidence to make decisions about targeting, sequencing, and resource allocation. In humanitarian settings, everyone involved in delivery benefits from understanding how results are measured and how data quality affects accountability.

Participants should be able to draft a complete M&E plan, a data quality assurance approach, and a stakeholder reporting template. Those outputs are designed to be directly usable in the next program cycle rather than remaining as classroom exercises.

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