The course will then move on to describing and explaining the successive steps of project cycle management : situation analysis, response design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation. The classic tools used in the aid sector will be introduced step by step during lectures, and will be applied during workshops to a specific relief project that students will progressively design in groups.
Learning Outcomes
1. Practice decision making when limited data is available
2. Collect and analyse secondary data
3. Design a humanitarian project
Professional Skills
1. Project Management
2. Team Work
3. Problem solving
- Group work in class: 8 hours
- Autonomous group work: 4 hours a week/ 48 hours a semester
- Online self-paced e-learning: 3 hours
- Final defense: 1 hour
- Individual research for the project design: about 6,5 hours a week/ 78 hours a semester
- Oral: Group Workshop presentations during Session 3: 10% of the final mark (average of the two class presentations)
Individual mark during the final defence of the project: 20% of the final mark
Individual mark of the overall participation during the semester: 10% of the final mark