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1 Introduction to Policy Introduction to Policy Processes Processes Dan Laitsch
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1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Introduction to Policy Introduction to Policy ProcessesProcesses

Dan Laitsch

Page 2: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

2

OverviewOverview

Sign inBusiness

– Crashed blog– Grades and extensions

Review last class– Stats– Research– Policy

Page 3: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Class 2: Review Class 2: Review

Stats– Mean, median, mode– Variability– Correlations– Reliability and Validity

Research– Thanks tanks, advocacy, scholarship

Policy– Institutional rational choice– Multiple streams– Social construction

Page 4: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Class 3 AgendaClass 3 Agenda

Review Stats

– Hypotheses– Probability

PBL groups Small groups: Role play prep -Lunch- Role plays Policy readings PBL Groups

Page 5: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Part III: Part III: Taking Chances for Fun Taking Chances for Fun and Profitand Profit

Chapter 7 Hypotheticals and You: Testing Your Questions

Page 6: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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What you learned in Chapter 7What you learned in Chapter 7

– The difference between samples and populations

– The importance of…The null hypothesisThe research hypotheses

– How to judge a good hypothesis

Page 7: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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What is a hypothesis?What is a hypothesis?

An “educated guess”

Role is to reflect the general problem statement or question that is driving the research

Translates the problem or research question into a form that can be tested.

Not all good research requires a hypothesis

Page 8: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Samples and PopulationsSamples and Populations

Population– The large group to which you would like to

generalize your findings Sample

– The smaller, representative group of the population that is used to do the research

Sampling error – a measure of how well a sample represents the population

Page 9: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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The Null HypothesisThe Null Hypothesis

Statements that contain two or more things that are equal (or unrelated) to one another

H0 : 1 = 2

– E.g. there is no difference between the two groups– Starting point and is accepted as true without knowing

more information– Benchmark to compare actual outcomes

0912:,H=0912:,H=

Page 10: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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The Research HypothesisThe Research Hypothesis

Statement that there is a relationship between two variables

Two Types…– Nondirectional -- H1 : X1

≠ X2Reflects a difference; direction is not specifiedTwo-tailed test

– Directional -- H1 : X1 > X2Reflects a difference; direction is specifiedOne-Tailed test

Page 11: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Null & Research HypothesesNull & Research Hypotheses

Page 12: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Differences Between Null and Differences Between Null and Research HypothesesResearch Hypotheses

Null Research

No relationship between variables

Relationship between variables

Refers to the population Refers to the sample

Indirectly tested Directly tested

Written using Greek symbols Written using Roman symbols

Implied hypothesis Explicit hypothesis

Page 13: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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What Makes a Good Hypothesis?What Makes a Good Hypothesis?

Stated in a declarative form rather than a question

Defines an expected relationship between variables

Reflects theory or literature on which they are based

Brief and to the point Testable – include variables that can be measured

Page 14: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Glossary Terms to KnowGlossary Terms to Know

Hypothesis– Null Hypothesis

– Research Hypothesis Direction & Non-directional hypotheses One-tailed & Two-tailed test Population Sample

– Sampling error

Page 15: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Part III: Taking Chances for Fun and Part III: Taking Chances for Fun and ProfitProfit

Chapter 8 Are Your Curves Normal? Probability and Why it Counts

Page 16: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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What you learned in Chapter 7What you learned in Chapter 7

Understanding probability is basic to understanding statistics

Characteristics of the “normal” curve– i.e. the bell-shaped curve

All about z scores– Computing them– Interpreting them

Page 17: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Why Probability?Why Probability?

Basis for the normal curve– Provides basis for understanding probability of

a possible outcomeBasis for determining the degree of

confidence that an outcome is “true”– Example:

Are changes in student scores due to a particular intervention that took place or by chance alone?

Page 18: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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The Normal Curve The Normal Curve (a.k.a. the Bell-Shaped Curve)(a.k.a. the Bell-Shaped Curve)

Visual representation of a distribution of scores

Three characteristics…– Mean, median, and mode are equal to one

another– Perfectly symmetrical about the mean– Tails are asymptotic (get closer to horizontal

axis but never touch)

Page 19: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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The Normal CurveThe Normal Curve

Page 20: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Hey, That’s Not Normal!Hey, That’s Not Normal!

In general, many events occur right in the middle of a distribution with few on each end.

Page 21: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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More Normal Curve 101More Normal Curve 101

Page 22: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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More Normal Curve 101More Normal Curve 101

For all normal distributions…

– almost 100% of scores will fit between -3 and +3 standard deviations from the mean.

– So…distributions can be compared

– Between different points on the X-axis, a certain percentage of cases will occur.

Page 23: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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What’s Under the Curve?What’s Under the Curve?

Page 24: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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The The zz Score Score

A standard score that is the result of dividing the amount that a raw score differs from the mean of the distribution by the standard deviation.

What about those symbols?

( ),

X Xz

s

−=

Page 25: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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TheThe zz ScoreScore

Scores below the mean are negative (left of the mean) and those above are positive (right of the mean)

A z score is the number of standard deviations from the mean

z scores across different distributions are comparable

Page 26: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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What What zz Scores Represent Scores Represent

The areas of the curve that are covered by different z scores also represent the probability of a certain score occurring.

So try this one…– In a distribution with a mean of 50 and a

standard deviation of 10, what is the probability that one score will be 75 or above?

Page 27: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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The Difference between The Difference between zz scores scores

Page 28: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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What What zz Scores Really Scores Really RepresentRepresentKnowing the probability that a z score

will occur can help you determine how extreme a z score you can expect before determining that a factor other than chance produced the outcome

Keep in mind… z scores are typically reserved for populations.

Page 29: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Hypothesis Testing & Hypothesis Testing & zz ScoresScoresAny event can have a probability

associated with it.– Probability values help determine how

“unlikely” the even might be– The key --- less than 5% chance of occurring

and you have a significant result

Page 30: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Glossary Terms to KnowGlossary Terms to Know

ProbabilityNormal curve

– AsymptoticStandard Scores

– z scores

Page 31: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Small Group Roll PlaySmall Group Roll Play

Break into groups and plan role play

Lunch

Commence role play

Page 32: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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Policy ReadingsPolicy Readings

Chapters 17-20– Political Parties– Business Associations– Labour Movement– Voluntary Sector

Page 33: 1 Introduction to Policy Processes Dan Laitsch. 2 Overview Sign in Business –Crashed blog –Grades and extensions Review last class –Stats –Research –Policy.

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For Next ClassFor Next Class

Assignments for next class– Research Review. Small group work (as assigned by

the group). Readings:

– Studying Your Own School, Chapter 5– Statistics for People Who (think they) Hate Statistics,

Part 4 (Chapters 9-11)– Theories of the Policy Process: Part 3 & 4 (Chapters 5,

7, 8, 9)– Policy Analysis in Canada: Part 6 (Chapters 21-23)

End of day 2