“…These methods which are partly derived from the tradition of participatory rural evaluation include semi-structured interviews, observation, participatory mapping for social, demographic, and water resources, alongside sanitation surveys. Others include community walks and transects, seasonal flow, causality, quantity, and trend diagrams, Venn diagrams of local organizational relationships, score and ranking, estimates and quantifications, brainstorming, key probes and portraits or case [1], [2], [8], [11]. The participatory research method has gained prominence in the health and social sciences, giving voice to community with limited opportunity to influence research efforts, but has a rich valuable body of experience relevant to knowledge development [22]- [26].…”