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Training Course on “Training of Trainers from the Greater Mekong Sub- Region on Decentralized Education Planning in the Context of Public Sector Management Reform” Issues, challenges in using the internationally comparative data Mekong Institute & UNESCO Regional Office-Bangkok 23 February – 6 March 2009; Khon Kaen, Thailand Prepared by the Education Policy and Reform Unit UNESCO Bangkok February 2009 Module E4 Slide 1
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Session 3 What are the issues, challenges in using the internationally comparative data at the country level and how to resolve them? Slide 2
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Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (1) Comparability (Definitional issue) Use of population data Level of disaggregation Availability of statistics Multiple sources Usefulness and way to interpret Slide 3
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Comparability (Definitional issue) National definition vs. International definition Theoretical definition vs. Operational definition Different conceptual definitions Slide 4 Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (2)
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Use of population data National estimates vs. UN estimates Different sources at the national level Different sources at the regional and global levels Slide 5 Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (3)
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Level of disaggregation Availability of data by disaggregating Geographical break-down Other social-economic break-down Slide 6 Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (4)
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Availability of statistics Which indicators are available at the which level Regional average Global figures Estimating methodology (Treating missing values) Slide 7 Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (5)
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Multiple sources Different sources at the national level Different sources at the regional and global levels Population Education Indicators Surveys vs. EMIS Slide 8 Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (6)
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Usefulness and way to interpret Unit of analysis Purpose (monitoring vs planning) Ranking among the countries Index Political agenda Slide 9 Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (7)
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How are we resolving? Slide 10 Issues on Collecting, Using the Internationally Comparative Data (8)
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Slide 11 Be Transparent about Differences between National and International Indicators Problem: Differences between national and international indicators create confusion: ISCED & population estimates Solution: Greater transparency, accurate documentation and communication of the differences How: Better coordination with relevant agencies A systematic ISCED mapping Identification of data gaps technical guidelines Clear and transparent on how and sources of data for producing indicators
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Slide 12 Integrate Evidence from a Range of Data Sources Problem: the widening range of indicators and data sources that are available but not comparable Solution: Harmonization of measurement concepts and maintaining standards across different data sources How: Development of standard monitoring indicators Harmonizing definitions to support collection and use of survey-based data, e.g.. NSO household surveys Improvement on meta data
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Slide 13 Diagnose/Follow up Infrastructure and Technical Capacity Problems Problem: Weak/ineffective information system or no reliable national information (particularly -post-conflict countries & emergencies) Solution: Wide range of partnerships. Strategic interventions in chain of data production. Donors: funding and raising the importance of statistics How: Diagnosing systems (DQAF) to identify problems in data production cycles Capacity building Exploiting Information technology
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Slide 14 Support Culture of Data Use Problem: lack of demand-driven services, use of statistics; low analytical capacity; low investments in statistics Solution: Stimulate demand and supply for reliable data: How: Evidence-based planning Capacity building Creating and pressuring demand (global development agenda: EFA, MDG, PRSP, MEA)
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Slide 15 Narrow the Data Relevance Gap – (identify issues – develop concepts) Problem: Indicators do not address key policy issues Solution: Improving existing and developing new indicators through: inter-Governmental consultations technical advice and approbation process How: Involving stake-holders in questionnaire redesign Allowing for context- & regionally-specific indicators E.g. Global & Regional EFA Working Groups E.g. GMR, MDA, Capacity building
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Slide 16 Narrow the Data Timeliness Gap - (identify blockages – improve production cycle) Problem: Data do not capture recent changes in policy Solution: improve timely collection and reporting: Donors’ pressure for data use in planning Review system of data collection and reporting How: Evidence-based planning Aligning data collection to national production cycles Full utilization of information technology Capacity building and effective resource management
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Thank You Slide 17
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