Description

Book Synopsis

Nicola A. Alexander is an Associate Professor in the Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development at the University of Minnesota. Her formal educational background is in public administration and policy; she is particularly interested in issues of adequacy, equity, and productivity as they relate to PK-12 education. Dr. Alexander is a board member of the National Education Finance Association and has published in American Educational Research Journal, Educational Policy, Journal of School Business Management, and Journal of Education Finance.



Table of Contents

Dedication

Chapter 1: Laying the groundwork

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Why should leaders study policy analysis

Players on the leadership landscape

What policy analysis can do

The role of persuasion

Users of policy analysis

Why use this text?

What is policy analysis?

A brief definition

Why policy analysis?

The goal of policy analysis

Types of policy analysis

Ex Post and Ex Ante Analysis

Forecasting, prescribing, monitoring, evaluating

Rational, Structural, Cultural Lens

Transparency versus Objectivity

Philosophies of education

Values: Cornerstone of worldviews and philosophies

Brief overview of worldviews

Eight common values

Defining philosophy

Key philosophies and their role in education policy

Idealism

Realism

Pragmatism

Phenomenology and existentialism

Neo-Marxism

Postmodernism and critical theory

Policy values in action

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 2: Getting started at the beginning: thinking of policy analysis as problem analysis

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Where do you start?

The role of leaders

Policy analysis as problem analysis

The problem is the beginning of analysis

Differences between condition, policy problems, and policy issues

The policy analysis process

The complexities of policy analysis

Policy analysis versus policymaking

The role of policy analysts

Phases in policymaking

Problem stream

Politics stream

Policy stream

Stages of the policy-making process

Issue definition Agenda setting

Policy formulation

Policy adoption Policy implementation Policy evaluation

Policy Analysis is not Policy Evaluation

Focusing on the problem

Policy evaluation

Policy evaluation as feedback

Policy evaluation as summative judgment

Going beyond evaluation

The steps to policy analysis

The craft of policy analysis

Key questions of the policy analysis process

Creating a policy analysis roadmap

Ten steps of policy analysis

Define the problem

Make the case

Establish your driving values

Come up with alternatives

Weigh your options

Make recommendation

Persuade us

Implement solution

Monitor outputs

Evaluate outcomes

Stepping stones of policy analysis

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 3: Taking the first step: Define the problem

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Structuring the problem

Writing a clear description of the problem

Different phases in problem structuring

Problematic Characteristics of policy problems

Personal versus policy problem

Interdependence of problems

Subjectivity and artificiality of structuring policy problem

Dynamic nature of policy problems

Building on your condition statement

Making the condition a problem

Scope of the problem

Bounding the problem

Who is included?

Causes of the problem

Rational perspective

Institutional perspective

Cultural perspective

Goals and objectives of solving the problem identified

The goal is the obverse of the problem

Objectives are working definitions of goals

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 4: Make the case by assembling the evidence

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Purpose of assembling the evidence

Functions of research

Transforming data into evidence

Assessing the nature and extent of the problem

Assessing the particular features of an identified policy situation

Assessing past policies

Using the purpose of the evidence to determine what is needed

Evidence for monitoring

Evidence for prescription\

Evidence for evaluation

Evidence for forecasting

Determining the value of specific data

How do you make good use of data

Building your argument

Assessing data contexts

How to locate relevant sources

People and documents are key

Collection strategies

Data from people within and without your organization

Data from documents from within and without your organization

How to categorize types of data

Quantitative or qualitative debate

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 5: Establish your driving values

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

What do you care about?

Establish evaluative criteria

Relationship between values and criteria

What does success look like?

What are the specific criteria that frame policy decisions

Does it work?

How will you know?

Is it fair?

Horizontal equity

Vertical equity

Transitional equity

Ability to pay

Benefits principle

Can we afford it?

What is the role of economics?

Opportunity costs

Private versus public benefits

Market failures

Provision versus production

Counting the costs

Costs versus benefits

Decision tools

How can you tell?

Using the economic tools

Cost-benefit analysis

Will people support it?

How acceptable is the alternative to different groups?

What factors will influence the political acceptability of policy?

How can you measure the acceptability of a policy?

How can you change the acceptability of policy intervention?

Who will implement it?

Is there sufficient administrative capacity?

What are the major organizational limitations?

How can you tell?

Difference from the status quo

Policy instrument

Personnel support

Available resources

What if the criteria conflict?

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 6: Come up with alternatives

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

What are alternatives?

Alternatives are not outcomes

Alternatives are not an implementation plan

Basic alternatives and their variants

Finding alternatives by modeling the system

The metaphor of the market

Production metaphor

Evolutionary models

Doing nothing different

How do you generate alternatives

Sources of alternatives

Generic alternatives

Customizing policy interventions

Policy types

Policy mechanisms and best practice context

Inducements

Capacity-building

System change

Mandates

Hortatory

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 7: Weigh your options (Evaluating alternatives)

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

How do you weigh your options?

Anticipating the future

Safeguards in forecasting

Discussing relevant criteria

Measuring effectiveness

Measuring equity

Measuring costs

Measuring political feasibility

Measuring implementability

Packaging your alternatives

Distinguishing between alternatives

Using quick quantitative analysis

Creating a scorecard

Evaluating alternatives – single step, “norm based” approach

Evaluating alternativestwo-step, “criterion-base” approach

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 8: Make Recommendation

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Transforming tradeoffs into preferred results

Beyond eenie, meenie, minie, moe

Role of the analyst

Transform values into results

Education leader as researcher, bureaucrat, or entrepreneur

Policy analyst as advisor and decision maker

Need for advocacy

Value laden arguments

Ethically complex arguments

Is there one best way?

Refine approaches to recommendation

Testing the credibility of your recommendation

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 9: Persuade us

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

The art of communication

How to convey your analysis

Who is your audience?

Expectations of audience

Audience knowledge and understanding

Audience response to solution

Audience forum

Homogenous or diverse

Complete or abridged analysis

Time

Making the policy argument

Authority

Method

Generalization

Classification

Cause

Sign

Motivation

Intuition

Analogy

Parallel case

Ethics

Checklist of communicating analysis

Timeliness

Clarity of findings

So what?

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 10: Implement recommended action

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Setting the stage for change

Why won’t it work

Creating an implementation plan

Outline the plan

Expand the outline

Check your plan

Implementing strategically

Major implementation challenges

Human (people-related) problems

Process (program-related) problems

Structural (setting-related) problems

Institutional (program; setting-related) problems

Stages in implementation

Mobilization

Implementation proper

Institutionalization

Chapter summary

Review questions

News story for analysis

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 11: Monitor outputs of action

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

What is monitoring?

Functions of monitoring

Compliance

Accounting

Auditing

Explanation

What should we track?

Functions, data, and data sources

Three key monitoring questions

Why should we track these data?

Who should track the required data?

How often should we track these data?

Methods of tracking

Establishing baselines

Determining what change is being measured

Measurement across space and time

Units of analysis

Displaying data

Chapter summary

Review questions

News Story for Analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Chapter 12: Evaluate outcomes

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Evaluating versus monitoring

Focus of evaluation

Types of evaluation

Purpose of evaluation

Formative evaluations

Summative evaluations

Users of evaluation

Approaches to evaluation

Methods of evaluation

Components of an evaluation plan

Analytical considerations

Common methods of assessment

Randomized control trials

Direct controlled experiments

Quasi-experimental models

Matching

Before and after comparisons

With and without comparisons

Non-experimental direct analysis

Political considerations

Chapter summary

Review questions

News Story for Analysis

Discussion Questions S

elected websites S

elected references

Chapter 13: Concluding remarks and Pullout Field guide

Chapter objectives

Education vignette

Remember why we do policy analysis

Policy analysis and you

Policy analysis and the community

Policy analysis and change

Policy analysis and evaluation

An Illustration of the steps in Policy Analysis using an existing policy example Elementary and Secondary Education Act

Define the problem

Make the case

Establish your driving values

Come up with alternatives

Weigh your options

Make recommendation

Persuade us

Implement solution

Monitor outputs

Evaluate outcomes

Chapter summary

Review questions

News Story for Analysis

Discussion Questions

Selected websites

Selected references

Summary of checklist for each step (Pullout field guide)

References

Policy Analysis for Educational Leaders

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    A Hardback by Nicola A. Alexander

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      View other formats and editions of Policy Analysis for Educational Leaders by Nicola A. Alexander

      Publisher: Pearson Education
      Publication Date: 4/26/2012 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780137016006, 978-0137016006
      ISBN10: 013701600X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Nicola A. Alexander is an Associate Professor in the Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development at the University of Minnesota. Her formal educational background is in public administration and policy; she is particularly interested in issues of adequacy, equity, and productivity as they relate to PK-12 education. Dr. Alexander is a board member of the National Education Finance Association and has published in American Educational Research Journal, Educational Policy, Journal of School Business Management, and Journal of Education Finance.



      Table of Contents

      Dedication

      Chapter 1: Laying the groundwork

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Why should leaders study policy analysis

      Players on the leadership landscape

      What policy analysis can do

      The role of persuasion

      Users of policy analysis

      Why use this text?

      What is policy analysis?

      A brief definition

      Why policy analysis?

      The goal of policy analysis

      Types of policy analysis

      Ex Post and Ex Ante Analysis

      Forecasting, prescribing, monitoring, evaluating

      Rational, Structural, Cultural Lens

      Transparency versus Objectivity

      Philosophies of education

      Values: Cornerstone of worldviews and philosophies

      Brief overview of worldviews

      Eight common values

      Defining philosophy

      Key philosophies and their role in education policy

      Idealism

      Realism

      Pragmatism

      Phenomenology and existentialism

      Neo-Marxism

      Postmodernism and critical theory

      Policy values in action

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 2: Getting started at the beginning: thinking of policy analysis as problem analysis

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Where do you start?

      The role of leaders

      Policy analysis as problem analysis

      The problem is the beginning of analysis

      Differences between condition, policy problems, and policy issues

      The policy analysis process

      The complexities of policy analysis

      Policy analysis versus policymaking

      The role of policy analysts

      Phases in policymaking

      Problem stream

      Politics stream

      Policy stream

      Stages of the policy-making process

      Issue definition Agenda setting

      Policy formulation

      Policy adoption Policy implementation Policy evaluation

      Policy Analysis is not Policy Evaluation

      Focusing on the problem

      Policy evaluation

      Policy evaluation as feedback

      Policy evaluation as summative judgment

      Going beyond evaluation

      The steps to policy analysis

      The craft of policy analysis

      Key questions of the policy analysis process

      Creating a policy analysis roadmap

      Ten steps of policy analysis

      Define the problem

      Make the case

      Establish your driving values

      Come up with alternatives

      Weigh your options

      Make recommendation

      Persuade us

      Implement solution

      Monitor outputs

      Evaluate outcomes

      Stepping stones of policy analysis

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 3: Taking the first step: Define the problem

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Structuring the problem

      Writing a clear description of the problem

      Different phases in problem structuring

      Problematic Characteristics of policy problems

      Personal versus policy problem

      Interdependence of problems

      Subjectivity and artificiality of structuring policy problem

      Dynamic nature of policy problems

      Building on your condition statement

      Making the condition a problem

      Scope of the problem

      Bounding the problem

      Who is included?

      Causes of the problem

      Rational perspective

      Institutional perspective

      Cultural perspective

      Goals and objectives of solving the problem identified

      The goal is the obverse of the problem

      Objectives are working definitions of goals

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 4: Make the case by assembling the evidence

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Purpose of assembling the evidence

      Functions of research

      Transforming data into evidence

      Assessing the nature and extent of the problem

      Assessing the particular features of an identified policy situation

      Assessing past policies

      Using the purpose of the evidence to determine what is needed

      Evidence for monitoring

      Evidence for prescription\

      Evidence for evaluation

      Evidence for forecasting

      Determining the value of specific data

      How do you make good use of data

      Building your argument

      Assessing data contexts

      How to locate relevant sources

      People and documents are key

      Collection strategies

      Data from people within and without your organization

      Data from documents from within and without your organization

      How to categorize types of data

      Quantitative or qualitative debate

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 5: Establish your driving values

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      What do you care about?

      Establish evaluative criteria

      Relationship between values and criteria

      What does success look like?

      What are the specific criteria that frame policy decisions

      Does it work?

      How will you know?

      Is it fair?

      Horizontal equity

      Vertical equity

      Transitional equity

      Ability to pay

      Benefits principle

      Can we afford it?

      What is the role of economics?

      Opportunity costs

      Private versus public benefits

      Market failures

      Provision versus production

      Counting the costs

      Costs versus benefits

      Decision tools

      How can you tell?

      Using the economic tools

      Cost-benefit analysis

      Will people support it?

      How acceptable is the alternative to different groups?

      What factors will influence the political acceptability of policy?

      How can you measure the acceptability of a policy?

      How can you change the acceptability of policy intervention?

      Who will implement it?

      Is there sufficient administrative capacity?

      What are the major organizational limitations?

      How can you tell?

      Difference from the status quo

      Policy instrument

      Personnel support

      Available resources

      What if the criteria conflict?

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 6: Come up with alternatives

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      What are alternatives?

      Alternatives are not outcomes

      Alternatives are not an implementation plan

      Basic alternatives and their variants

      Finding alternatives by modeling the system

      The metaphor of the market

      Production metaphor

      Evolutionary models

      Doing nothing different

      How do you generate alternatives

      Sources of alternatives

      Generic alternatives

      Customizing policy interventions

      Policy types

      Policy mechanisms and best practice context

      Inducements

      Capacity-building

      System change

      Mandates

      Hortatory

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 7: Weigh your options (Evaluating alternatives)

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      How do you weigh your options?

      Anticipating the future

      Safeguards in forecasting

      Discussing relevant criteria

      Measuring effectiveness

      Measuring equity

      Measuring costs

      Measuring political feasibility

      Measuring implementability

      Packaging your alternatives

      Distinguishing between alternatives

      Using quick quantitative analysis

      Creating a scorecard

      Evaluating alternatives – single step, “norm based” approach

      Evaluating alternativestwo-step, “criterion-base” approach

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 8: Make Recommendation

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Transforming tradeoffs into preferred results

      Beyond eenie, meenie, minie, moe

      Role of the analyst

      Transform values into results

      Education leader as researcher, bureaucrat, or entrepreneur

      Policy analyst as advisor and decision maker

      Need for advocacy

      Value laden arguments

      Ethically complex arguments

      Is there one best way?

      Refine approaches to recommendation

      Testing the credibility of your recommendation

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 9: Persuade us

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      The art of communication

      How to convey your analysis

      Who is your audience?

      Expectations of audience

      Audience knowledge and understanding

      Audience response to solution

      Audience forum

      Homogenous or diverse

      Complete or abridged analysis

      Time

      Making the policy argument

      Authority

      Method

      Generalization

      Classification

      Cause

      Sign

      Motivation

      Intuition

      Analogy

      Parallel case

      Ethics

      Checklist of communicating analysis

      Timeliness

      Clarity of findings

      So what?

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 10: Implement recommended action

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Setting the stage for change

      Why won’t it work

      Creating an implementation plan

      Outline the plan

      Expand the outline

      Check your plan

      Implementing strategically

      Major implementation challenges

      Human (people-related) problems

      Process (program-related) problems

      Structural (setting-related) problems

      Institutional (program; setting-related) problems

      Stages in implementation

      Mobilization

      Implementation proper

      Institutionalization

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News story for analysis

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 11: Monitor outputs of action

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      What is monitoring?

      Functions of monitoring

      Compliance

      Accounting

      Auditing

      Explanation

      What should we track?

      Functions, data, and data sources

      Three key monitoring questions

      Why should we track these data?

      Who should track the required data?

      How often should we track these data?

      Methods of tracking

      Establishing baselines

      Determining what change is being measured

      Measurement across space and time

      Units of analysis

      Displaying data

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News Story for Analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Chapter 12: Evaluate outcomes

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Evaluating versus monitoring

      Focus of evaluation

      Types of evaluation

      Purpose of evaluation

      Formative evaluations

      Summative evaluations

      Users of evaluation

      Approaches to evaluation

      Methods of evaluation

      Components of an evaluation plan

      Analytical considerations

      Common methods of assessment

      Randomized control trials

      Direct controlled experiments

      Quasi-experimental models

      Matching

      Before and after comparisons

      With and without comparisons

      Non-experimental direct analysis

      Political considerations

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News Story for Analysis

      Discussion Questions S

      elected websites S

      elected references

      Chapter 13: Concluding remarks and Pullout Field guide

      Chapter objectives

      Education vignette

      Remember why we do policy analysis

      Policy analysis and you

      Policy analysis and the community

      Policy analysis and change

      Policy analysis and evaluation

      An Illustration of the steps in Policy Analysis using an existing policy example Elementary and Secondary Education Act

      Define the problem

      Make the case

      Establish your driving values

      Come up with alternatives

      Weigh your options

      Make recommendation

      Persuade us

      Implement solution

      Monitor outputs

      Evaluate outcomes

      Chapter summary

      Review questions

      News Story for Analysis

      Discussion Questions

      Selected websites

      Selected references

      Summary of checklist for each step (Pullout field guide)

      References

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