Difference between revisions of "Most Significant Change (MSC)"
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'''''How long should the stories be?'''''<p>Most MSC stories are a page or less in length, with some being up to two pages. Shorter MSC stories are quicker and easier to read, but they should not be so short that vital information is left out.</p> | '''''How long should the stories be?'''''<p>Most MSC stories are a page or less in length, with some being up to two pages. Shorter MSC stories are quicker and easier to read, but they should not be so short that vital information is left out.</p> | ||
− | '''''Ethics of collecting stories'''''<p>When a storyteller tells a story, the person collecting the story needs to explain how the story is to be used and to check that the storyteller is happy for the story to be used. The storyteller should also be asked whether they wish their name to accompany the story. Even when consent has been given, it is good practice to check with | + | '''''Ethics of collecting stories'''''<p>When a storyteller tells a story, the person collecting the story needs to explain how the story is to be used and to check that the storyteller is happy for the story to be used. The storyteller should also be asked whether they wish their name to accompany the story. Even when consent has been given, it is good practice to check with [[storytelling|storyteller]] before placing any stories in external media such as newspapers.</p> |
Revision as of 16:27, 9 December 2009
Most Significant Change (MSC)[1] |
The most significant change (MSC) technique is a form of participatory monitoring and evaluation.
Like monitoring, MSC provides ongoing data about program performance that assists program management. But MSC goes further than most conventional forms of monitoring in that it also focuses on outcomes and impact, involving people in making judgments about the relative merits of different outcomes in the form of MSC stories. In this way, MSC contributes to both monitoring and evaluation. MSC also has the potential to influence organizational learning within an organization, and maybe even within its associated stakeholders. The horizontal dimension is between a group of participants engaged in discussing and selecting the most significant of a set of stories. Vertical dialogue involves exchanges of views between groups of participants at different levels. The vertical dimension is very important if the MSC process is to aid organizational learning throughout the organization. It depends on good documentation and communication of the results of one group’s discussion to the next. The process pf MSC involves the collection of significant change (SC) stories emanating from the field level, and the systematic selection of the most significant of these stories by panels of designated stakeholders or staff. The kernel of the MSC process is a question along the lines of:
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Implementing MSC | |
For a successful MSC implementation, it is necessary to create and facilitate the following contexts:
Step By Step[2]Step 1: Starting and raising interest
Using domains of change helps organizations to group a large number of SC stories into more manageable lots, which can each be analyzed in turn. The “any other type of change” domain is a useful open category that allows participants to report significant changes that don’t fit into the named domains. Between three and five domains is a manageable number. The limiting factor is how much time participants are willing to spend in discussing each domain. Domain can be identified before SC stories are selected or afterwards by sorting SC stories into meaningful groups. This depends on the extent to which the organization wants to be open to new experiences rather than continuing to be guided by past experiences.
The frequency of collection of SC stories has varied from fortnightly to yearly. Each organization has to make its own decision about the most appropriate reporting period, balancing the costs and benefits involved, and taking into account the reporting gaps that any existing monitoring and evaluation systems may be ignoring. Our experience suggests that organizations tend to start MSC with more regular reporting and decrease the frequency as the process continues.
How to capture SC stories:
Information to be documented should include:
Most MSC stories are a page or less in length, with some being up to two pages. Shorter MSC stories are quicker and easier to read, but they should not be so short that vital information is left out. Ethics of collecting storiesWhen a storyteller tells a story, the person collecting the story needs to explain how the story is to be used and to check that the storyteller is happy for the story to be used. The storyteller should also be asked whether they wish their name to accompany the story. Even when consent has been given, it is good practice to check with storyteller before placing any stories in external media such as newspapers.
Building capability for effective MSC[3]Job Aid |