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MyHeritage Syllabus Presentations Emails

Unit Introduction and What You Will Learn

Week four is asynchronous. In Edin and Shaefer (2016), students will read about the impact of poverty on housing. Students read two chapters in Linquiti (2022), focusing on logical reasoning and how we collect and evaluate evidence in policy analysis. There are forums where students can reflect on housing challenges, engage with the textbook’s end-of-chapter discussion questions, practice applying reasoning methods, begin developing the evidence base for their policy analysis papers, and examine the distinction between advocacy and neutral policy analysis. I will have a lecture video talking about logical reasoning and how it can be applied to policy analysis. The agenda is to be determined.

The learning objectives this week include:

Unit Assignments

Content

W-04 A-01 Asynchronous Participation and Engagement

The expectation is that each of your replies will be substantive and provide meaningful perspectives, contributing to the forum’s conversation and scholarship. They can be related to the prompts or building on conversations shared by peers. There are six forums for this week, and you are expected to make at least five replies across any of the forums. These forums include the following:

A-03 Take Home Exam 01

You can find A-03 - Take Home Exam 01. It is due Monday, 6/22 at 8 am.

Unit Resources

You can listen to a podcast episode for this week’s reading Chapters 5 and 6 Logical Blueprints for Social Policy, or see the entire series Podcast Series.

I’m working on a lecture video and will post it by the end of the day on Tuesday. I’ll post it here when it is done.

Reference

Edin, K. J., & Shaefer, H. L. (2016). $2.00 A Day: Living on almost nothing in America. HarperCollins.

Linquiti, P. D. (2022). Rebooting policy analysis: Strengthening the foundation, expanding the scope. CQ Press.

To-Do List