Posts

Showing posts from April, 2021

A Field Guide to Emotions

Image
Today being the last day of April, which is National Poetry Writing Month, sharing the one poem I was able to write for  Day 24  of NaPoWriMo . The prompt was to look for an article about an animal, and then turn it into a poem by changing the name of the animal into something abstract. Haven't written a whole poem in a looong while, and it was great to write in fun. After doing the self-mastery work this past year , for the first time I was consciously aware of how the Judge has been trying to write my poetry for me all these years  😜  In fact the theme I've chosen is directly linked to some of the stuff I've learned through that work. So this time I just let my creative subconscious lead the way, just as I'm able to do when I'm making visual art. Credit to this  WWF article  for the seed words and wonderful photo above (because I originally just wanted to write about sloths 🤷‍♀️). Here's an unrevised version of the poem 😊

OPEN ACCESS: Multiple Actors and Confounding Factors

Image
  A chapter my former boss and I wrote has just gotten a refresh, and the whole book is now open access! It's rare that we get to collect new data on something we worked on almost 10 years ago, and it was interesting to revisit our thinking as well, after doing a lot more evaluations. Especially since this was my first evaluation when I was starting out! Unfortunately the intro got deleted from the chapter 😕 So here it is below. Multiple actors and confounding factors Evaluating impact in complex social-ecological systems The objective of impact evaluation is to establish causality between an intervention and observed changes or effects, whether the changes are positive or negative, intended or unintended and direct or indirect. To accomplish this, impact evaluation must at a minimum undertake three tasks: first, determine the extent of change that has taken place since the intervention started; second, establish a causal link between programme or project activities and the obser...

Grounded

Image
I sit on the expanse of grass, feeling each soft blade under my legs. The sun is lower on the horizon now. Late afternoon light filters through some trees on top of a hill in the distance. I close my eyes and deeply breathe in the fresh air. Two more hours of work left in my day. I cross two traffic lights and walk the three minutes back to my house. You could say I’ve been a wanderer since I was 16. Venturing to Manila for college from my hometown of Davao City, I’ve since moved from city to city and country to country, sometimes not staying longer than a few months in one place. Work finally got me to stay put in Washington DC the last 10 years. Still I fly out several times a year, not just for adventure but also for my job in international development. In 2019, I was away at some other state or country almost every other weekend. Google Maps says I traveled enough miles to go around the world two times. That was to seven countries—starting in Uruguay in March, then Belize, Hondu...