Research proposal writer

Project Chosen:

Construction of a New Primary Seven Classroom Block at St. Joseph’s Secondary School, Nakawa Division, Kampala

 

This is a 6-month project funded by a Japanese Government grant (total budget: UGX 2.5 million). The project involves site clearing, foundation, superstructure, roofing, finishing, and furnishing to accommodate 280 students. It is a typical donor-funded school infrastructure project in Uganda.

(a) Risk Management Plan

Purpose of the Risk Management Plan

The primary purpose of this Risk Management Plan is to establish a systematic, proactive, and structured approach to identifying, analyzing, responding to, and monitoring risks throughout the entire lifecycle of the Primary Seven Classroom Block construction project at St. Joseph’s Secondary School. By implementing a comprehensive risk management process, the project team aims to minimize uncertainties that could negatively impact the project’s triple constraints time, cost, and quality while maximizing the probability of successful project delivery. This plan ensures that potential threats are addressed early, opportunities are capitalized on, and the project remains aligned with the school’s educational goals and the donor’s expectations.

Furthermore, this Risk Management Plan serves as a critical communication and governance tool that defines clear roles, responsibilities, and procedures for risk handling among all stakeholders, including the Project Sponsor, Project Manager, contractor, site engineer, and quantity surveyor. It promotes a risk-aware culture where potential issues are openly discussed, documented, and managed in a timely manner. Ultimately, the effective implementation of this plan will safeguard the project’s objectives, protect the school’s resources and reputation, enhance stakeholder confidence, and contribute to the long-term sustainability and functionality of the new classroom facility for future generations of students.

 

 

 

 

 

ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

RoleResponsibilitiesFrequency of Involvement
Project Sponsor (Head Teacher)– Provides overall leadership and strategic direction – Approves major risk responses and mitigation strategies – Reviews and approves escalation of high-level risks – Ensures alignment with school goals and donor requirementsMonthly reviews as needed for escalation
Project Manager (Director / You)– Leads the entire risk management process – Develops, updates, and maintains the Risk Register – Facilitates risk identification workshops – Monitors risk status and reports progress – Ensures risk responses are implemented on timeWeekly updates and Bi-weekly risk meetings
Site Engineer– Identifies technical and site-specific risks (e.g., weather, quality, safety) – Conducts daily site inspections and reports new risks – Implements assigned risk responses on site – Monitors quality and safety complianceDaily on-site and Weekly reporting
Quantity Surveyor– Identifies cost-related risks (material price changes, budget overruns) – Tracks material quantities and costs – Provides cost estimates for risk responses – Monitors financial impact of risksWeekly cost tracking and Bi-weekly meetings
Contractor– Identifies construction-related risks (workmanship, labour, theft) – Implements day-to-day risk responses on site – Reports incidents and emerging risks immediately – Maintains site security and safetyDaily operations and Immediate incident reporting
All Project Team Members– Actively participate in risk identification – Report any new or emerging risks promptly – Execute assigned risk response actions – Attend bi-weekly risk review meetingsOngoing and  Bi-weekly meetings

 

 

 

 

 

Methodology

This Risk Management Plan adopts a systematic five-step methodology based on established project management best practices. The process begins with risk identification, where potential risks are systematically uncovered through brainstorming sessions with the project team and stakeholders, risk checklists specific to school construction projects, SWOT analysis, review of lessons learned from similar past projects, and direct interviews with the contractor, site engineer, and quantity surveyor.

Once identified, risks undergo qualitative analysis using a Probability-Impact Matrix, where each risk is evaluated based on its likelihood of occurrence and potential impact on project objectives (time, cost, quality, and safety).

Appropriate risk response strategies are then developed for each significant risk, selecting from four main options: Avoid, Mitigate, Transfer, or Accept, with clear actions, timelines, and assigned risk owners.

Risk monitoring and control is conducted on an ongoing basis through bi-weekly risk review meetings, regular updating of the Risk Register, and continuous tracking of key risk indicators such as schedule variance, cost variance, and material price fluctuations. Finally, formal risk reviews and lessons learned sessions are held at the end of each major milestone and at project completion to evaluate the effectiveness of responses and capture insights for future projects. This integrated and iterative approach ensures that risk management remains a continuous, proactive process throughout the entire project lifecycle rather than a one-time activity.

 

Tools

  • Risk Register (Excel)
  • Probability-Impact Matrix
  • Risk Reporting Dashboard (updated bi-weekly)

(b) Risk Identification

Key risks identified through team brainstorming and stakeholder consultation:

Risk CategorySpecific Risks
FinancialBudget overrun due to material price fluctuations; delayed grant disbursement
ScheduleDelays in material delivery; heavy rains causing site flooding
Technical/QualityPoor workmanship by contractor; substandard materials
Legal/RegulatoryDelayed building permit approval; non-compliance with PPDA procurement rules
ExternalTheft/vandalism of materials; labour strikes; community resistance
Health & SafetyWorker accidents; COVID-19 or disease outbreaks on site
StakeholderPoor communication with donor; parent/community dissatisfaction

(c) Risk Prioritization (Probability-Impact Matrix)

Risks were scored on a scale of 1–5 (Probability × Impact = Risk Score). Top 5 prioritized risks:

RankRiskProbabilityImpactRisk ScorePriority
1Heavy rains causing site flooding & delays4520High
2Material price fluctuations leading to budget overrun4416High
3Delayed building permit approval3515High
4Poor workmanship by contractor3412Medium-High
5Theft/vandalism of materials4312Medium-High

(d) Risk Responses (for Top Risks)

RiskResponse StrategySpecific ActionsRisk OwnerContingency Plan
Heavy rainsMitigateInstall proper drainage, schedule critical works in dry season, procure tarpaulinsSite EngineerExtend timeline by 2 weeks + extra labour
Material price fluctuationsTransferInclude price escalation clause in contractor contract; lock in supplier prices earlyProject ManagerSwitch to alternative suppliers
Delayed building permitAvoidSubmit permit application 8 weeks in advance with complete documentationHead TeacherEngage PPDA consultant if delayed
Poor workmanshipMitigateDaily site supervision + quality checklists; engage certified contractorSite EngineerReplace contractor at own cost if quality fails
Theft/vandalismMitigateInstall security fence + 24-hour watchman; insure materialsContractorClaim insurance + increase security

(e) Monitoring and Control of Risks (Ongoing Basis)

Risks will be monitored and controlled throughout the project using the following mechanisms:

  • Risk Register: Updated every two weeks with new risks, status, and actions taken.
  • Bi-weekly Risk Review Meetings: Project team reviews top 5 risks, assigns new owners, and tracks progress.
  • Key Performance Indicators (KPIs): Track schedule variance, cost variance, and number of incidents monthly.
  • Triggers & Escalation: Clear triggers defined (e.g., 10% cost overrun to  escalate to Sponsor).
  • Lessons Learned Log: Updated after every major milestone to capture what worked and what did not.
  • Monthly Donor Reporting: Include risk status and mitigation progress in progress reports.
  • Close-out Review: At project completion, conduct a full risk management lessons-learned session.

This comprehensive risk management approach significantly increases the probability of delivering the classroom block on time, within budget, and to the required quality, while protecting the school’s reputation and donor relationship.

 

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