How were members of provincial working groups selected? The

Pelajaran dari Pengalaman Proyek Pesisir 1997 - 1999 3. What types of monitoring activities have been undertaken in Proyek Pesisir? As used in Proyek Pesisir, monitoring activities include studies of: a long-term socio-economic and environmental trends at the village level; b benchmarking early, intermediate and final outputs of specific projects; and c summaries of project activities at each of the pilot sites and in the national office as prescribed by USAIDPMP. Village level monitoring includes both systematic surveys and observations and partici- patory monitoring by residents. 4. What is the current status of monitoring activities? At present: a systematic community monitoring is occurring at the Sulawesi Utara field sites; b participatory monitoring is occurring in four villages within the three Sulawesi Utara field sites; and c a system has been designed and is in place to identify, collect and disseminate information on all Proyek Pesisir activities Performance Monitoring Plan - PMP. No systematic plan is in place for monitoring all the individual project activities at the provincial level, but in Sulawesi Utara, a great deal of information is documented in Field Extension Officer monthly reports, and other project documents. In Year 2, the Learning Team focused on village level monitoring activities in Sulawesi Utara. Information for learning is provided in periodic work- shop reports, field staff interviews and reports by the IPB Learning Team. 5. How were variables to be monitored identified? In Sulawesi Utara, team members and technical consultants selected the variables for the baseline survey and monitoring. They also chose the variables for partici- patory environmental assessment by village residents. PMP variables were selected by USAID in consultation with Chief of Party. However, PMP data, such as participation rates, are collected by project staff and collated by Learning Team staff. Project staff find some but not all PMP variables useful. 6. What procedures have been established for insuring data reliability? In Sulawesi Utara, explicit protocols have been developed for the collec- tion and management of monitoring data. Some of the protocols for socio- economic and participatory monitoring were first tested in Sulawesi Utara pilot projects. These protocols have been carefully followed. Data collec- tion and management has proved to be a very time-consuming activity for staff. Some Possible Lessons: 7. Monitoring is proving to be an important activity contributing to greater accountability, performance assessment and learning. However, the value of monitoring is often not immediately obvious to staff. In Sulawesi Utara, the monitoring experiences shows that a substantial amount of time and resources needs to be allocated to designing a monitoring system, developing protocols, staff training, data collection and management. 8. In Sulawesi Utara, baseline information has proved to be useful in design- ing issue-based profiles for sites. 9. In developing and refining monitoring programs for field sites, more emphasis needs to be placed on assessing intermediate project objectives. The purpose of such monitoring is to insure that projects are implemented appropriately and each step was carried out effectively. For example, in a mangrove replanting project, is the site chosen for replanting appropriate, has the right species of mangrove been selected, are plants planted cor- rectly, do they survive, etc.? 10. Efficient monitoring requires the development of a few key indicators, which can be vigorously monitored. With regard to community level coastal management, there is little consensus about what these key indicators are. xvii