GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY
School of Public Policy
PUBP 713.01
Policy and Program
Evaluation
Wednesdays:
4:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Mike Fauntroy, Ph.D.
Office
Hours: Wednesday’s–2:00 p.m. to 4:15
p.m.; Thursday’s–5:00 p.m. to 7:15 p.m.
Telephone:
Office:
Email: mfauntro@gmu.edu
Course Description and Requirements
This course examines how the
policies and programs of public agencies are proposed, established, operated,
and evaluated. The course also covers
the role of research in the program evaluation process, including alternative
methodologies for policy assessment.
The purpose of the course is to familiarize the student with the process
through which public policy and programs are judged to be successful, or not.
Students will be evaluated on the
following: (1) two written critical interpretations of assigned literature
which will be called RESPONSE PAPERS–which will be discussed in detail in a
later handout–(40% of your final grade); (2) reading and active participation
in seminar discussions (20%); (3) oral presentations (15%); and (4) a final
examination (25%). More specific
guidelines on the preparation of the response papers will be provided in a
separate handout. Each student is
expected to complete all of the assigned readings for each class session, and
be prepared to summarize, offer critical assessments–or both–of the literature
as well as the comments of fellow classmates.
Assigned Texts
James P.
Lester and Joseph Stewart, Jr., Public
Policy: An Evolutionary Approach, 2nd Edition, (Belmont:
Wadsworth Thompson, 2000).
Paul E.
Peterson and Bryan C. Hassel (eds.), Learning
From School Choice, (Washington, D.C.:
Brookings Institution Press, 1998).
Peter H.
Rossi, Howard E. Freeman, and Mark W. Lipsey, Evaluation: A Systematic Approach, 6th edition,
(Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1999).
There also
are a number of journal articles that are assigned readings. They are available in the library (on
reserve) or on-line.
Policies
Mobile Phones: Please be courteous to
your colleagues and instructor by turning off your mobile phone before entering
the classroom.
Extra Credit: No extra credit assignments will be given in this course.
Late Submission of Research Papers: All papers should be submitted on time. Any paper submitted after the deadline will
be penalized one full letter grade (no exceptions).
Incomplete Grades: No incomplete grades
will be assigned at the end of this semester, except in the case of
extraordinary, officially validated emergencies.
Course Outline and Assigned Readings
1. Introduction: The Policy Continuum; What is
Evaluation? Who Conducts Analysis? Why, and for Whom? How Has Policy Evaluation Evolved?
Rossi, Freeman, and Lipsey, Evaluation: A Systematic Approach,
Chapters 1 & 12.
Haveman, “Policy Analysis and Evaluation Research After Twenty Years,” Policy Studies Journal, V. 16, No. 2,
pp. 191-218.
Lee and Sampson, “A Practical Approach to Program Evaluation,” Evaluation and Program Planning, V. 13,
No. 2, pp. 157-164.
2. Types
of Public Policy
Ripley, Policy Analysis in Political Science, Chapter 3 (Reserve)
3. Public
Policy Formulation
Rochefort and Cobb, “Problem Definition, Agenda Access, and Policy
Choice,” Policy Studies Journal, V.
21, No. 1, pp. 56-71.
Arnold, “Beyond Self-Interest: Policy Entrepreneurs and Aid to the
Homeless,” Policy Studies Journal, V.
18, No. 1, pp. 47-66.
5. Public
Policy Implementation
Bryner, “Implementing Global Environmental Agreements,” Policy Studies Journal, V. 19, No. 2,
pp. 103-114.
Levin and Ferman, “The Political Hand: Policy Implementation and Youth
Employment Programs,” Journal of Policy
Analysis, V. 5, No. 2, pp. 311-325.
6. Public
Policy Evaluation–Conceptualizing an Evaluation Study
Rossi, Freeman, and Lipsey, Chapters
2 & 3.
Lipsey and Pollard, “Driving Toward Theory in Program Evaluation: More
Models to Choose From,” Evaluation and
Program Planning, V. 12, 317-328.
7. Identifying
Program Objectives
Rossi, Freeman, and Lipsey, Chapters
4 & 5.
8. Program
Monitoring
Rossi, Freeman, and Lipsey, Chapter
6
Wholey and Hatry, “The Case for Performance Monitoring,” Public Administration Review, V. 56, No.
6, pp. 604-610.
9. Evaluating
Program Impact
Rossi, Freeman, and Lipsey, Chapters
7-10
10. Evaluating
Program Efficiency
Rossi, Freeman, and Lipsey, Chapter
11.
Zerbe, “Is Cost-Benefit Analysis Legal?
Three Rules,” Journal of Policy
Analysis and Management, V. 17, No. 3, pp. 419-456.
Skaburskis, “Cost-Benefit Analysis: Ethics and Problem Boundaries,” Evaluation Review, V. 11, No. 5, pp.
591-611.
11. Case
Study: School Choice
Paul E. Peterson and Bryan C. Hassel (eds.), Learning From School Choice, (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 1998).
12. Case
Study: “Three Strikes”
Gray, Larsen, Haynes, and Olson, “Using Cost-Benefit Analysis to Evaluate
Correctional Sentences,” Evaluation
Review, V. 15, No. 4, pp. 471-481.
13. Case
Study: Department of Education policy outlawing student loans for ex-offenders
Burd, “Seeking Redemption for a Drug Law,” The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 5, 2002.
Higher Education Amendments Act,
P.L. 105-244, H. Amdt. 582 (A016)
14. Course
Review
Writing Tips
Title Pages
Your paper should have one that
includes at least the following information: paper title, your name, course
name, course number, and the date. If
you have a title page, there is no need to repeat the title on first page of
text. Try to give your paper a
relatively interesting title.
"Short Paper" or "Term Paper" or "Interest
Group Assignment" are dull. You
can put your title in a font that is slightly larger than normal text but avoid
extremely large fonts. In other words,
12-18 point fonts are fine, but 35 point fonts are too large.
Quotation Marks and Indenting Quotes
You should place quotation marks around
any direct quotes. If the person you
are quoting quotes another source, you should use the double marks for the
outer quotation marks and the single marks for the inner quotation marks. Example: Snob
magazine reported: "If you aren’t vacationing in Martha’s Vineyard or The
Hamptons, then you aren’t vacationing.”
If your quote is lengthy (four or more
lines), you should indent the quote and use single-spaced text. You do not need to use quotation marks
around indented quotes because it is clear from the context and the format.
Ellipses
You should always use ellipses when you
remove words from a quotation. You
should not use ellipses if your removal of words changes the meaning of the
text. If your missing words are in the
middle of sentence, you should replace theme with three dots separated by
spaces as well as preceded and followed by spaces (i.e.
<space>.<space>.<space>.<space>). The spaces make the ellipses look better
when typed. Example: "Many older
residents find that retirement communities are more . . . peaceful if children
do not live on the property."
If you omit the end of sentence before
going on to the next sentence in your quotation, you should use four dots
instead of three with no space between the first dot and the end of the first
sentence and two spaces after the fourth dot (as in the two spaces after a
period). The first dot is the
period. Example: "The Democrats
ran a mean-spirited campaign in 1998...Their radio commercials about church
burnings implied that the Republicans are racists."
It's or Its?
The first is short for "it
is" as in "It's sad to Republicans that a Democrat lives in the White
House." The second is a pronoun as
in "Florida suffered a terrible blow when its orange crop froze last
January."
Brackets
When you excerpt a quote, you may
want to substitute a few words of your own for the actual words for
clarification purposes. For example,
you might want to replace a pronoun with the actual person or group. You need to put the words that you insert in
brackets. Example: [Tom Brokaw]
recently wrote a book that lauds the World War II generation. Similarly, if your quote begins in the middle
of the sentence, you may capitalize the first letter, but you should put it in
brackets. Example: [T]he Iraqi
government objected to sanctions.
Guide to Citations
I am a stickler for proper
citations. Following are various
types. You are free to choose a
particular style, though I prefer bibliographic citations in footnotes or
endnotes. Please be consistent: use the
same style throughout your paper.
Parenthetical Citations
Instead of footnotes, you may choose
to use parenthetical citations (though footnotes are also perfectly
acceptable). All works cited in
parentheses must have full citations in your bibliography at the end of the
paper.
The Basic Form. The basic form is really very simple:
(Author Year), as in (McGillicutty 1997).
If you wish to refer to a specific page in the book, the form is (Author
Year: Page). Example: (McGillicutty
1997: 27). If multiple pages need
citation simply use dashes or commas as necessary, as in (McGillicutty 1997:
27-32, 64). If you are referring to the
author in the text, you should simply put the date, and pages if necessary, in
parentheses after the reference to the author's name. Example: According to McGillicutty (1997: 9), Judge Leon
Higginbotham directly contradicted Thernstrom (1987) on the applicability of
Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act to
redistricting.
Multiple Sources. If you want to cite more than one work at
the same time, use semi-colons to separate the cites. Example: (McGillicutty 1997; Holden 1987). If you have more than one work by the same
author(s) in one year, you need to designate the work that appears first in
your bibliography (the one with the title that begins with the letter that
appears earlier in the alphabet)
as
"a" and the second as "b" and so on. The letter designations should appear in
both the bibliography and in your parenthetical citations. Example: (McGillicutty 1997a).
Multiple Authors. You should list all authors for works with
three or fewer authors. The order of
their names should following the order given by the authors. Example: (Fitch, Fox, and Brown 1992; Smalls
and Shakur 1998). If there are more
than three authors, give the author's first name and then "et
al." Example: (Brown et al 1991).
No Author. Use the title in place of the author if there is no author. You should feel free to shorten it as long
as it is clear and distinct. Example:
(LDF Report 1994).
Biblographic Citations
Books: Fanon, Frantz. The Wretched of the Earth. New York: Grove Press, Inc., 1963.
Articles in Scholarly Journals: Bullock
III, Charles S. 1981.
"Congressional Voting and the Mobilization of a Black Electorate in
the South." Journal of Politics 43
(December): 662-82.
Magazine and Newspaper Articles: Kelly,
Michael. "Segregation
Anxiety." New Yorker, 20 November
1995, 43-54. Swain, Carol M. "Black-Majority Districts: A Bad Idea." New York Times, 3 June 1993, A21.
Supreme Court Cases: Allen v. State Board of Elections, 393 U.S.
544 (1969). The number before the
"U.S." refers to the volume; the number after is the page number. The "U.S." refers the to Supreme
Court Reporter. (District and Circuit
Court decisions will have something else instead of U.S. between numbers, e.g.
F. 2d or F. Supp.) Even if you found
your case on the internet (e.g. on Findlaw or Lexis), you should still use this
format as the cite will likely give you this citation format somewhere near the
beginning of the case.
Internet Citations
There are
lots of ways to cite Internet sources.
I am not particular about which one you use as long as you follow
certain rules:
Cite the exact URL or Internet site. Do not just cite the general home page. The point is to be able to quickly locate
the exact page on which you found your information. Even though it is more lengthy and more complex, give the full
cite of the page so that your reader can go directly to it. For example, if you want to cite the
Christian Coalition position paper on gambling, you should cite the exact site,
http://www.cc.org/issues/gambling.html, not the general Christian Coalition
site, http://www.cc.org/. State the
date you visited the page.
"Visited 30 January 1999." or "Visited January 30,
1999." are both sufficient. Pages
unfortunately change often, so it is nice to know when you visited the
page. Give the title of the page as
well as the Internet site. Simply
giving the site or URL is not very informative. People don't speak Internet and you want your paper to be
accessible to all. Many pages on the
Internet are just replications of paper sources. If this is the case, you should cite it as you would the paper
form. For example, if you use an
article from the Washington Post, you should simply cite it as you would a
normal newspaper article. Sample Bibliographic Form: "Christian
Coalition Stand on Gambling." http://www.cc.org/issues/gambling.html. Visited 19 August 1999. Sample Parenthetical Citation: (Christian
Coalition Stand on Gambling 1999) or http://www.cc.org/issues/gambling.html
1999). Personally, I prefer the former
format as it is more informative.
STATEMENT ON PLAGIARISM
Plagiarism is the representation of
another person's words and ideas as one's own.
This misrepresentation is a breach of ethics that seriously compromises
a person's reputation. Professional careers
have been ruined by revelations of plagiarism.
Researchers, therefore, must scrupulously
acknowledge sources to give proper credit for borrowed materials. The following rules should be observed to
make sure that the distinction between one's own words and ideas and those of
others is justly maintained. (Of
course, submitting a paper that is completely the work of another person is
plagiarism in its most extreme form.)
1.
Words, phrases, and sentences of another person should be enclosed in
quotation marks and footnoted in proper form.
2.
Paraphrases and summaries of the ideas of others should be indicated
with a footnote. These paraphrases and
summaries should not represent merely the rearrangement of sentence elements
but should be rewritten in one's own style.
3.
Quotations, paraphrases, and summaries should be introduced with the
name of the writer being cited.
4.
Every item footnoted in the paper (i.e., all sources of others' words
and ideas) should appear in the bibliography in proper form.
5.
Footnotes should contain all the information required by standard
footnote form and specifically indicate the location of the material
cited. Page numbers should be checked
for accuracy before a paper is submitted; the reader must be able to find the
source of the material quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.
A student who plagiarizes all or part of an assignment can expect severe penalties, ranging from failure in that assignment to being recommended for a hearing before a judiciary body of the University. In most cases, a letter will be placed in the student's permanent file.