Booking options
£450 - £1,662
+ VAT

£450 - £1,662
+ VATDelivered Online
Intermediate level
COURSE DATES
November
Earliest access: from 9th October 2026 for early registrants.
Rolling access thereafter: later registrants receive access within 1-2 working days of signup.
Weekly live classes: 20th Nov, 27th Nov and 4th Dec 2026.
Post-course access: online materials available until 8th January 2027.
February
Earliest access: from 11th January 2027 for early registrants.
Rolling access thereafter: later registrants receive access within 1-2 working days of signup.
Classic intensive live classes: 22nd - 24th Feb 2027.
Post-course access: online materials available until 24th March 2027.
March
Earliest access: from 20th January 2027 for early registrants.
Rolling access thereafter: later registrants receive access within 1-2 working days of signup.
Weekly live classes: 3rd Mar, 10th Mar and 17th Mar 2027.
Post-course access: online materials available until 21st April 2027.
June
Earliest access: from 23rd April 2027 for early registrants.
Rolling access thereafter: later registrants receive access within 1-2 working days of signup.
Weekly live classes: 11th Jun, 18th Jun and 25th June 2027.
Post-course access: online materials available until 16th July 2027.
Prices include VAT.
Please note that full payment is required before access to self study materials is provided.
For full course details please click here.
COURSE OVERVIEW
This remote course provides an in-depth introduction to research design and methods for policy evaluation. It covers the main quantitative approaches used in programme evaluation, impact evaluation and causal inference, including randomised experiments, instrumental variables, sharp and fuzzy regression discontinuity designs, regression methods, matching methods, difference-in-differences and synthetic controls.
The lectures are thoughtfully structured to accommodate participants with diverse backgrounds. Each topic is presented at various levels, ensuring accessibility through intuitive explanations, optional formal derivations, in-depth discussions and practical examples. The live classes offer a summary of each topic and provide an interactive platform for participants to ask questions and actively engage in guided practical sessions, applying each evaluation method to real-world data using Stata or R.
By the end of this course, participants will have acquired a solid foundation in research design principles and practical skills to understand, implement and interpret quantitative evaluation methods.
IS THIS COURSE RIGHT FOR ME?
This is an intermediate course in quantitative policy evaluation and causal inference. It is best suited to participants who are comfortable engaging with empirical examples, regression-based thinking, core statistical concepts and either Stata or R. You do not need advanced econometrics, and the formal material is optional and supported by intuitive, non-technical take-away points. However, the course is not designed as an introduction to statistics, econometrics, Stata or R, and it is not a programming course. Participants with little quantitative or software background can still benefit from the intuition, examples and interpretation, but should expect a steeper learning curve and may wish to spend additional time on the introductory material, scripts and outputs before and after the live sessions. For the practicals, participants are provided with a guided step-by-step PDF containing tips and syntax for both Stata and R. Complete scripts and solutions are provided in advance for both Stata and R, so participants can run the code and focus on understanding and interpreting the output. For those using Stata, a short tutorial is also provided covering what is needed for the practical exercises. During the live practicals, participants are encouraged to have a go independently or in groups before the full walkthrough.
FORMAT OF THE COURSE
The Remote PEM Course offers a flexible learning experience through a combination of self-paced study and live online meetings. The course is structured into two parts:
Part 1) Pre-recorded Lectures (21.5 hours): The pre-recorded lecture videos allow participants to study the material at their own pace. Access opens at least six weeks before the first live class, with the exact access
window confirmed for each edition. Participants who register after access has opened are onboarded within 1–2 working days. The videos remain accessible for at least three weeks after the final live class. However, participants are strongly encouraged to complete the lectures before the live meetings, which are designed to focus on recap, questions, guided practical exercises and interpretation.
Part 2) Live Classes (ca. 20 hours): The live component is spread over three live classes, delivered either as three consecutive days or as three weekly sessions, depending on the course edition. It consists of the following:
Summary and recap: Barbara, the instructor, will provide a summary and recap of each topic covered in the pre-recorded lectures. Participants will have the opportunity to ask questions related to the specific topic being discussed.
Guided practical work: Participants will be given dedicated time to work on guided practical exercises either individually or in breakout rooms. These exercises will use Stata or R to implement each evaluation method using real data.
· Live demonstration: Barbara will conduct a live demonstration of the practical exercise using Stata or, where there is sufficient interest, alternate between Stata and R. She will guide participants through the process, explaining each step, highlighting which outputs matter and discussing how to interpret the results in context.
Indicative Class Timings
The exact break and finishing time may vary slightly depending on questions and discussions.
10:00 Class starts
11:30 15-min break
13:15 40-min break
15:00 15-min break
16:45 Class concludes
IMPORTANT NOTE:
· Please make sure you have access to Zoom, either via the app or through a web browser, as the live sessions will be conducted on Zoom.
· To actively engage in the practical exercises, both during the live sessions and for self-guided practice later on, participants need access to either Stata or R.
For more information please contact events@ifs.org.uk