To support UNICEF’s inception phase by leading consultations, validating the programme design, and establishing the baseline foundations for project implementation.
Institutional/Corporate Contract
Terms of Reference (TOR)
Summary:
Title | Programme Design & Results Framework Consultancy – Resilient Schools Initiative |
Purpose | To support UNICEF’s inception phase by leading consultations, validating the programme design, and establishing the baseline foundations for project implementation. |
Location | Hybrid |
Duration | 150 days |
Start Date | May 18th 2026 |
Reporting to | Education Specialist |
Background:
The Caribbean is highly vulnerable to natural hazards and climate change, with hurricanes, flooding, and extreme weather frequently disrupting education and threatening children’s safety and their continuous learning. Recent disasters, including Hurricanes Maria and Irma (2017), Lisa (2022), Beryl (2024), and Melissa (2025), have highlighted longstanding structural vulnerabilities of school infrastructure and limitations in emergency preparedness and education continuity planning. In addition to sudden-onset disasters, the region is also facing slow-onset stressors such as rising sea levels, prolonged droughts that worsen water and food insecurity and increasing temperatures that are further expanding the spread of vector-borne diseases. These events have repeatedly demonstrated not only the fragility of school buildings but also the underlying risks faced by girls, children with disabilities, and marginalized groups, whose learning, safety, and wellbeing are disproportionately affected.
Recognizing these challenges, the Caribbean region has strengthened its collective efforts to advance education system resilience. A significant milestone in these efforts is the Caribbean Safe School Initiative (CSSI), the first regional framework dedicated to embedding resilience across education systems. Since 2017, CSSI has provided a unified platform for 19 Caribbean governments to coordinate around the Comprehensive School Safety Framework (CSSF) and drive action across its three pillars:
The CSSI Roadmap (2022–2030) elevated these commitments by defining regional indicators, strengthening multisector coordination, and calling for systemic uptake of standards for resilient school design, safe operations, and climate responsive teaching and learning. The 2025 Safe School Coordination Review further emphasized the need for stronger backbone support, more robust monitoring systems, and enhanced national focal point leadership to ensure consistent implementation across countries.
Regional organizations, including Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), Caribbean Community (CARICOM), United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), play central roles in advancing policy harmonization, capacity building, curriculum reform, modelling resilient school infrastructure, and strengthening emergency preparedness mechanisms. These partnerships are critical to scaling good practices, sharing knowledge regionally, and leveraging joint monitoring systems that align with the CSSI Roadmap indicators.
The Strengthening Resilient Schools and Education in the Caribbean Programme, funded by Global Affairs Canada (GAC) and implemented by UNICEF, builds on this regional momentum. Designed as a five year, multicounty initiative (2026–2030), the programme scales system-level reforms and invests in resilient schools as essential community anchors capable of protecting children’s right to safe, continuous, and quality learning, even amidst escalating climate and disaster risks. The programme adopts a systems strengthening approach that integrates resilient infrastructure, policy institutionalization, risk reduction education, school-based safety mechanisms, and regional coordination capacities.
Implementing Countries: 7 Official Development Assistance (ODA)-eligible countries (Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, St Lucia, Suriname, St Vincent & the Grenadines).
Purpose
UNICEF seeks a consultant firm or consortium, to lead and coordinate the inception phase analytical and validation processes, ensuring that programme outputs, indicators, partnerships, and implementation pathways are fully co-developed with countries, regional bodies, and partners.
Specific Tasks & Methodology:
The consultant will apply a participatory, evidence-driven, and system-strengthening methodology to deliver all analytical, consultative, and planning outputs required for the inception phase, in alignment with UNICEF’s programme design standards and the obligations outlined in the Grant Arrangement (e.g., baseline establishment, stakeholder engagement, and results framework refinement)
Tasks
Suggested Methodology
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Suggested Methodology
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Suggested Methodology
6. Beneficiary Country Inception Workshop
Tasks
Logframe
Ultimate Outcome:
Intermediate Outcome:
Immediate Outcomes:
Output & Deliverables
*Recommended timelines are assumed to be concurrent and serve as recommendations to potential consultants.
Reporting:
Supervision for this assignment will be provided by the UNICEF Education Specialist with support from the UNICEF ECA GAC Grant Management Committee
Expected background and Experience:
ORGANIZATIONAL REQUIREMENTS
The service provider should be a registered firm or a consortium of consultants with a proven track record in international development, specifically within the Caribbean context.
Experience: A minimum of 8–10 years of institutional experience in programme design, monitoring and evaluation (M&E), and disaster risk reduction (DRR) in education.
Technical Expertise: Demonstrated expertise in developing Results-Based Management (RBM) frameworks, Theories of Change (ToC), and complex baseline assessments for multi-country initiatives.
Sectoral Knowledge: Strong understanding of the Comprehensive School Safety Framework (CSSF) and the Caribbean Safe School Initiative (CSSI).
Donor Familiarity: Previous experience working with UNICEF and/or Global Affairs Canada (GAC), specifically regarding their reporting standards.
KEY PERSONNEL REQUIREMENTS
The consultancy team should ideally consist of the following profiles:
Team Leader (Senior Consultant)
Education: Advanced university degree (Master’s or Ph.D.) in Education, International Development, Social Sciences, or a related field.
Experience: At least 10 years of professional experience in leading large-scale programme design and evaluations.
Skills: Expertise in facilitating high-level stakeholder consultations and regional dialogues with inter-governmental bodies (CDEMA, OECS, CARICOM).
Leadership: Proven ability to manage multi-disciplinary teams and deliver complex outputs under tight deadlines.
Technical Specialist (Climate Resilience & DRR in Education)
Education: Advanced degree in Environmental Science, Disaster Management, or Education Policy.
Experience: Minimum of 7 years specializing in climate-resilient education systems or "Safe Schools" programming.
Skills: Familiarity with GADRRRES tools and infrastructure resilience standards in the Caribbean context.
Monitoring, Evaluation & Learning (MEL) Specialist
Education: University degree in Statistics, Social Sciences, or Economics with a focus on quantitative/qualitative research.
Experience: Minimum of 5–7 years in designing logframes, selecting indicators, and conducting baseline surveys with disaggregated data (sex, age, disability).
Skills: Proficiency in data visualization and system mapping tools.
Prior experience with Global Affairs Canada grant implementation or Global Partnership for Education Caribbean Work programme would be an asset.
Evaluation Criteria:
The technical evaluation will be considered in accordance with the following information:
Technical Proposal: 70 points
Note: The Financial Proposals will be opened only to the companies considered technically approved (range between 49 to 70 points).
Financial Proposal (30 points)
The Financial Proposal will be opened and tabulated within the Technical Proposal and the final range will be provided. Submission should align to deliverables.
Recourse:
UNICEF reserves the right to withhold all or a portion of payment if performance is unsatisfactory, if work/outputs are incomplete, not delivered or for failure to meet deadlines. Performance indicators against which the satisfactory conclusion of this contract will be assessed include timeliness/quality of submission and responsiveness to UNICEF and counterpart feedback.
Property Rights:
UNICEF shall hold all property rights, such as copyright, patents and registered trademarks, on matters directly related to, or derived from, the work carried out through this contract with UNICEF. The bidder must submit all documentation and source code, where necessary, to UNICEF upon successful launch.
Payment Terms/Schedule:
Full payment will be made against all agreed upon deliverables after successful provision of the services and submission of final invoice to the Contract Manager. Full payment within 30 days after completion of satisfactory performance. UNICEF General Terms and Conditions will apply for non-satisfactory performance.
How to Apply:
The application package should include the following:
*Financial Proposal to be issued exclusive of Sales Tax/VAT
Prospective institutional or corporate contractors should apply to the above email address with the subject line “Programme Design & Results Framework Consultancy – Resilient Schools Initiative ” no later than Wednesday 29th, April, 2026, 23:59 PM (Eastern Standard Time).